Deputy President, French President to honour anti-apartheid activists

Source: Government of South Africa

Deputy President, French President to honour anti-apartheid activists

Ahead of the G20 Leaders’ Summit at the weekend, Deputy President Paul Mashatile will host French President Emmanuel Macron to commemorate the French citizens who played a role in the fight against apartheid in South Africa.

The President of France will be in the country to join other leaders who will be attending the Group of Twenty (G20) Leaders’ Summit scheduled for 22-23 November, under the theme ‘Solidarity, Equality, Sustainability’.

“South Africa and France enjoy cordial bilateral, political and economic relations in areas such as trade and industry, defence, science and technology, energy, education, transport, arts and culture, among others,” said the Presidency in an advisory on Thursday.

Friday’s wreath-laying ceremony will take place at the Freedom Park Heritage Site & Museum in Pretoria.

“The ceremony follows South Africa’s recent successful visit to France, which further strengthened the historically warm relations between the two countries by expanding on existing cooperation projects through mobilising investments, as well as identifying new areas of cooperation with specific focus on trade and investment,” said the Presidency.

The Deputy President paid a courtesy visit to President Macron at his residence, the Palais de l’Élysée, in Paris in May prior to concluding a successful working visit to that country.

READ | Deputy President pays courtesy visit to French President Macron

The meeting followed a successful SA-France Investment Conference, where commitments were made to upscale trade relations between the two countries. –SAnews.gov.za

Neo

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G20 Social Summit declaration presented to President Ramaphosa

Source: Government of South Africa

In symbolic finale to the G20 Social Summit, a collective declaration representing the voices of workers, civil society, youth, women, persons with disabilities, and vulnerable communities across the globe, was formally handed over to President Cyril Ramaphosa.

The declaration was delivered on stage by South Africa’s young leaders at the Summit that was held at the Birchwood Hotel and OR Tambo Conference Centre on Thursday.

The declaration was read by Amogelang Mashele, President of the Nelson Mandela Children’s Parliament and a prominent advocate in the Children20 (C20) initiative. 

Moments earlier, dozens of children joined hands in song led by gospel artist Lebo Sekgobela, setting a deeply moving scene that underscored what the President has described as possibly the best of all the G20 summits to be held. 

READ | President Ramaphosa hails G20 Social Summit as ‘possibly the best of all G20 summits’

After receiving the declaration, President Ramaphosa embraced the children and took photographs with them, calling the moment a powerful expression of what he has repeatedly emphasised throughout the summit; inclusiveness, shared leadership, and people-centred participation. 

The declaration, representing outcomes of over 230 community dialogues held nationwide as part of South Africa’s “People’s G20,” outlines the collective global priorities for a fairer, more inclusive multilateral order.

Guided by the African philosophy of Ubuntu “I am because we are” the declaration calls for digital inclusion for all. 
In the declaration, delegates demand affordable and equitable access to digital infrastructure, universal digital literacy, and human-centred governance of artificial intelligence. The declaration stresses stronger online safety measures and the protection of children, women, and vulnerable groups from digital harm.

The declaration also calls for a fair and inclusive trade, resilience, and inclusive value chains.
“The rise of protectionism and increased volatility in global markets threaten the stability of multilateral trade, placing additional pressure on economies that are least equipped to absorb such disruptions. 

“We affirm that diversification of products, markets, and supply sources strengthens resilience; however, resilience alone is insufficient to ensure that trade works for all. We underscore the importance of transparent, predictable, and responsive trade governance systems that enable swift adaptation to shocks and structural changes,” the declaration read. 

The declaration also emphasised that the G20 has a critical role in restoring confidence in global trade and ensuring that the benefits of production networks and supply chains are shared equitably. 

It also called for climate justice, and a people centred Just Transition. With global warming threatening to exceed 2.5°C, delegates emphasised the need for climate action that balances ambition with justice.
 
The declaration calls for:
•    A people centred Just Transition.
•    A Just Transition Facility providing grants and concessional finance.
•    Debt relief mechanisms linked to climate action.
•    Universal access to affordable, clean energy by 2030; and
•    urgent action to eliminate pollution damaging ecosystems and human health.

The delegates also called for the reformation of the global financial architecture. The declaration highlights the inequities embedded in current global financial rules that disproportionately burden developing countries. It calls for reforms to credit rating systems, International Monetary Fund (IMF) frameworks, and Special Drawing Rights (SDR) allocation models, alongside innovative tools such as century loans, strengthened sovereign wealth collaboration and expanded access to long-term, inclusive development finance. 

The acceleration of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) also formed part of the declaration. Noting that only 18% of SDG targets are on track, delegates call for transparent national reporting, ethical governance, and innovative financing models to close the SDG investment gap. 

The declaration emphasises that development must be judged not only by growth, but by dignity, equality, opportunity, and the well-being of people and the planet.

Legacy 

The declaration concludes with the announcement of G20 Social Summit Legacy Projects, designed to institutionalise people-centred participation and ensure that the voices amplified under South Africa’s Presidency remain embedded in future global decision-making.

President Ramaphosa who delivered the closing address at the Summit, praised the declaration, saying the Social Summit succeeded in giving people across all communities a platform to speak for themselves, rather than be spoken for. – SAnews.gov.za

Deputy President Mashatile engages Visa executives 

Source: Government of South Africa

Deputy President Paul Mashatile has met with Visa executives on the sidelines of the Business 20 (B20) Summit.

The Deputy President met with Tareq Muhmood, Visa’s Regional President for Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, and Bobby Thomson, Senior Vice President and Global Head of Government Affairs, as well as their team.

Thursday’s meeting occurred on the sidelines of the B20 Summit at OR Tambo House in Pretoria, the Deputy President’s Office said.

Mashatile expressed his gratitude to Visa’s executives for their ongoing support and commitment to improving local infrastructure and the digital environment. 

This effort is expected to significantly enhance economic development and sustainability.

The Presidency said the meeting reaffirmed Visa’s long-term commitment to South Africa, which is backed by a R1 billion investment over the next three years. 

A key component of this investment is the establishment of South Africa’s first domestic Visa data centre, which launched in June of this year and is the first of its kind in Africa.

“As a government, we remain receptive to new avenues or concepts for investment, and we are committed to enhancing partnerships to augment investment in our beautiful nation. Your commitment to our country’s infrastructure development has not gone unnoticed,” said Deputy President Mashatile. 

The Deputy President also highlighted the significance of Visa’s partnership and investment in South Africa. 

He noted that this collaboration would localise transaction processing, improve the reliability of payment services, and support innovations such as digital wallets. 

Most importantly, he stated that it will empower small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), strengthen township economies, and promote youth development through training and mentorship programmes. 

The Deputy President concluded the meeting by extending an invitation to Visa executives to attend the 2026 South Africa Investment Conference. 

“South Africa will host the Investment Conference in March 2026, and we would like to encourage you to participate in this event as we explore further areas of investment and partnership that will benefit you as a company as well as South Africa and its people, especially the youth,” he said.

The B20 Summit 2025 is a significant event, as it is the first time an African country hosts the Group of 20 (G20). The three-day summit, which concludes today, gathered international business leaders, policymakers, and global partners to discuss the theme: ‘Inclusive Growth and Shared Prosperity through Global Cooperation’.

The high-level event serves as the culmination of a year of policy dialogue and task force engagement.
It is a platform for global dialogue, cross-sector collaboration and shared learning, connecting international perspectives with Africa’s leadership moment. – SAnews.gov.za

Deputy President Mashatile and President Macron to honour French anti-apartheid activists

Source: President of South Africa –

His Excellency, the Deputy President of the Republic of South Africa, Mr Paul Mashatile will on Friday, 21 November 2025, host his Excellency, the President of France, Mr Emmanuel Macron, to commemorate the French citizens who played a role in the fight against apartheid in South Africa.

The French President will be in the country to join other leaders who will be attending the Group of Twenty (G20) Leaders Summit scheduled for 22-23 November, under the theme – ” Solidarity, Equality, Sustainability “.

South Africa and France enjoy cordial bilateral, political and economic relations in areas such as Trade and Industry, Defence, Science and Technology, Energy, Education, Transport, Arts and Culture, among others.
 
The ceremony follows South Africa’s recent successful visit to France, which further strengthened the historic warm relations between the two countries by expanding on existing cooperation projects through mobilising investments, as well as identifying new areas of cooperation with specific focus on trade and investment.

Members of the media are invited to cover the Wreath-Laying Ceremony as follows:
Date: Friday, 21 November 2025
Time: 18:15 (Media to arrive at 17:30)
Venue: Freedom Park Heritage Site & Museum, Corner Koch and 7th Avenue, Salvokop, Pretoria 

Members of the media who wish to cover the Wreath-Laying ceremony should RSVP to Ms Tshiamo Selomo (The Presidency) on 066 118 1505 and Mr Tristan Roussignol Rètif (Embassy of France) on 082 610 2953.

Media enquiries: Mr Keith Khoza, Acting Spokesperson to Deputy President Mashatile on 066 195 8840

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria
 

Address by President Cyril Ramaphosa to the B20 Summit, Sandton Convention Centre, Johannesburg

Source: President of South Africa –

Programme Director,
B20 Co-Chairs, Ms Nonkululeko Nyembezi and Mr Mxolisi Mgojo,
B20 South Africa Sherpa, Mr Cas Coovadia,
Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition, Mr Parks Tau,
Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Mr Ronald Lamola,
AU and EU Commissioners,
Members of the Local Business Advisory Council,
Members of the International Business Advocacy Caucus,
Ambassadors and High Commissioners,
B20 Sherpas,
Delegates,
Distinguished guests,
Friends,

It is a great honour to address this gathering of business people from across the globe who, by their presence here, have affirmed their commitment to a better Africa and a better world.

The G20 is meeting for the first time on African soil.

From every corner of the earth, people are returning to the Cradle of Humanity – to reflect on the state of our world and to chart a way forward to a more inclusive, more prosperous and more sustainable future.

This is a moment of great significance for Africa. It is also a moment of great opportunity.

It is an opportunity for Africa to assert its place in global affairs.

To affirm its position as a leader of economic growth and social progress in the years and decades before us.

Africa has some of the fastest growing economies in the world.  

It has the youngest population.

It is endowed with abundant natural resources: with the critical minerals that will build the economy of the future, with the fertile lands that can feed the world, and with the sun and the wind that will power a revolution in energy.

The African Continental Free Trade Area provides an unprecedented opportunity to harness these resources for the good of the people of the continent.

It promises a new area of trade and investment across the borders that have for so long held Africa back.

The African Continental Free Trade Area promises greater alignment of rules, regulations and standards.

It promises the seamless movement of goods and provision of services across a market of 1.4 billion people.

As the work done by the B20 has made clear, Africa has the potential to be the next frontier of global production, commerce and innovation.

We call on the global community to embrace Africa’s rise.

A more prosperous Africa is a more prosperous world.

An Africa that is at peace, that is stable, that is well governed and that has the means to meet the needs of its people, makes for a better world.

If the G20 is to realise its mission of fostering a more stable and prosperous world, then Africa’s growth and development must be a priority.

This calls for investment in infrastructure and industry. It calls for investment in people and technology. It calls for a massive increase in finance for climate action and a just transition for African economies.

Africa’s growth and development calls for more deliberate and more decisive action towards debt sustainability on the African continent.

Many African countries are unable to invest in their people, in infrastructure or in productive activity because of the cost of servicing their debt.

Removing this burden will unleash the potential of many African economies and the contribution that they can make to global growth.

This task has been bolstered in recent days by the release of the report of the Africa Expert Panel chaired by former South African Finance Minister Trevor Manuel.

The panel’s report highlights the high cost of capital faced by African countries, which are higher than in other regions with similar fundamentals.  

It recommends measures to mobilise significantly more concessional funding from multilateral development banks and African trade and finance institutions.

The report says we need to address biased risk perceptions of Africa by mandating greater transparency and accountability from credit rating agencies.

Taken together, the detailed recommendations of the expert panel could create the conditions for an investment boom in Africa.

Through its deliberations over the past year, the B20 has done much to reinforce the value of Africa’s rise, and it has outlined in detail the actions that need to be taken and the conditions that need to be met to realise Africa’s rise.

The B20 has done much to position business as a force for progress.

The B20 could not have been clearer: the global business community is prepared, willing and able to drive inclusive, sustainable and resilient growth.

The global business community has made itself a reliable partner, keen to work with governments, with multilateral bodies, with social partners and with communities in pursuit of the common good.

The B20 has made it clear that growth must be inclusive.

Those who have been marginalised – women, youth, persons with disabilities, the unemployed – must become active and beneficial participants in the global economy.

This is a matter of social and economic justice. But it is so much more.

It is an opportunity to harness the capabilities, talents and effort of billions of people to unleash the productive potential of humanity.

This calls for an approach that invests in people. It must start in the earliest years of life, establishing through quality foundational education a platform for learning that produces the skills that the economy of tomorrow will need.

It calls for accessible, quality health care, for affordable social security and focused poverty alleviation measures.

It calls for support for micro, small and medium enterprises, for entrepreneurs and for informal businesses.

Workers need to be skilled and re-skilled as methods of production change, as new industries emerge, as old industries decline and as technology advances at an ever-increasing rate.

The B20 has said that growth must be sustainable.

For the last two centuries, the extraordinary growth of the global economy has been achieved at the expense of the very resources on which our species relies for survival.

We now know that unless we change course, urgently and resolutely, the conditions of life on this planet will become intolerable.

The move to a low carbon economy cannot be delayed. Indeed, it must be accelerated.

As we undertake this transition, we must be sure not to further deepen inequality between and within countries.

We cannot disadvantage those countries that bear the least responsibility for climate change, yet are today most vulnerable to its effects.

We therefore need a massive increase in financial support for just and inclusive transitions in developing economies. We must share knowledge, expertise and technology.

At the same time, we must be wary of unilateral trade measures that seek to promote cleaner energy, but that further restrict fair market access for economies that are still developing.

We need to pursue fair, transparent and multilateral trade arrangements that do not punish countries for a climate crisis that they did not make.

From the experience of recent years, we are clear that growth must be resilient.

We have seen the huge disruptions to production and trade that can be caused by global pandemics, war and conflict, and geopolitical turbulence.

At such times, we appreciate the value of multilateral institutions and a rules-based world order.  

We appreciate the importance of diverse and resilient supply chains, regulatory coherence and predictable trade relations.

As we work to reinforce the resilience of our economies and the resilience of the global economy, we must direct greater effort towards reducing inequality.

A more equal world, in which political and economic power is more fairly distributed, in which all people have an equal voice and an equal stake, such a world is more stable and more resilient.

The G20 Global Inequality Report produced by Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz and his committee of independent experts provides valuable guidance on the actions we can take towards such a world.

The recommendations contained in the committee’s report reinforce many of the priorities and actions that have been put forward at this B20 Summit and indeed throughout the year’s B20 engagements.

South Africa embarked on its G20 Presidency determined to advance the principles of Equality, Solidarity and Sustainability.

Over the course of the past year, most of the countries of the G20 have rallied in support of these principles, understanding that they are fundamental to our shared future.

We commend, applaud and thank the B20 for having imbued these principles with meaning and relevance.

I congratulate the B20 team and everyone from across the globe who participated in this worthy effort, and who are now determined to be part of the important work that lies ahead in building a better future for all.

I thank you.

Deputy President Paul Mashatile meets with Visa executives on the sidelines of the B20 Summit

Source: President of South Africa –

His Excellency, the Deputy President of the Republic of South Africa, Paul Mashatile, met with VISA’s Regional President for Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, Mr. Tareq Muhmood, Senior Vice President and Global Head of Government Affairs, Mr. Bobby Thomson, and their delegation on the sidelines of the B20 Summit at the OR Tambo House in Pretoria.  

Deputy President Paul Mashatile expressed his gratitude to VISA’s executives for their ongoing support and commitment to improving local infrastructure and the digital environment, significantly bolstering economic development and sustainability. 

The meeting reaffirms Visa’s long-term commitment to South Africa, anchored by a R1 billion investment over the next three years. A key component of this investment is the establishment of South Africa’s first domestic Visa data centre, the first of its kind in Africa. 

“As a government, we remain receptive to new avenues or concepts for investment, and we are committed to enhancing partnerships to augment investment in our beautiful nation. Your commitment to our country’s infrastructure development has not gone unnoticed,” said Deputy President Mashatile. 

Deputy President Mashatile emphasised the importance of VISA’s partnership and investment in South Africa, as it will help localise transaction processing, improve payment service reliability, support innovations such as digital wallets, and, most importantly, empower SMEs, enhance township economies, and promote youth development through training and mentorship. 

The Deputy President concluded the meeting by extending an invitation to VISA Executives to attend the 2026 South Africa Investment Conference. “South Africa will host the Investment Conference in March 2026, and we would like to encourage you to participate in this event as we explore further areas of investment and partnership that will benefit you as a company as well as South Africa and its people, especially the youth,” said Deputy President Mashatile. 

Media enquiries: Mr Keith Khoza, Acting Spokesperson to the Deputy President, on 066 195 8840

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria
 

Repo rate reduced to 6.75%

Source: Government of South Africa

Repo rate reduced to 6.75%

The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) has decided to reduce the policy rate by 25 basis points, to 6.75%, with effect from 20 November 2025.

Delivering the last MPC statement of the year on Thursday, SARB Governor Lesetja Kganyago said the decision to reduce the policy rate was unanimous. 

“Members agreed there was scope now to make the policy stance less restrictive, in the context of an improved inflation outlook. The risks to the growth outlook are assessed as balanced. Inflation has accelerated somewhat over the past few months, reaching 3.6% for October. This is higher than the 3% average for the first half of the year. 

“The uptick is mainly due to non-core items: meat, vegetables, and fuel. We continue to see this pressure as temporary, with inflation heading lower again from the beginning of next year. Indeed, recent outcomes have undershot our forecasts slightly,” the Governor said.

Due to a stronger rand, and a lower oil price assumption, there is a small downward revision to the inflation outlook, for both 2025 and 2026.

“For inflation expectations, we do not have an update from our usual survey this meeting, but market rates and surveys of analysts both show further progress towards the 3% objective. 

“Core goods prices are benefitting from exchange rate strength. Food price inflation seems to have peaked, although we have a small upward revision to this forecast, mainly from beef prices. 

“Services inflation is unchanged from the last meeting: the announced medical aid increases are lower than last year’s; at the same time, housing inflation has accelerated, which warrants ongoing scrutiny,” Kganyago said.

The MPC assessed the risks to the inflation outlook as balanced.

“The Quarterly Projection Model continues to forecast gradual rate cuts as inflation subsides. As before, this rate path remains a broad policy guide. Our decisions will continue to be taken on a meeting-by-meeting basis, with careful attention to the outlook, data outcomes, and the balance of risks to the forecast.

“Domestic growth is looking better than last year. The second quarter data surprised on the upside and the third quarter indicators are looking broadly positive. Household consumption has also been rising but investment continues to disappoint,” he said.

For this meeting, the MPC considered two risk scenarios.
“The first scenario featured a US dollar rebound, recognising that while the rand has appreciated this year, this partly reflects broad dollar weakness, not just rand strength. In this scenario, the rand depreciates back to its 2023 levels against the dollar, rather than holding on to its recent gains, as in our baseline.

“The second scenario was based on higher administered prices, linked to a rapid correction of the R54 billion electricity pricing error disclosed a few months back. The scenario also had inflation expectations staying higher for longer, in response,” the Governor said.

Both scenarios featured tighter monetary policy, with rates coming down more slowly compared to the baseline. 

The administered price scenario in particular shows that if price setters take on board the 3% target, South Africa will have space to get to lower rates faster.

At its second last meeting of the year in September, the central bank kept the repo rate unchanged at 10.5%.
READ | SA Reserve Bank keeps repo rate unchanged

At the tabling of the Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) earlier this month, National Treasury announced a new inflation target for South Africa of 3% with a 1 percentage point tolerance band. The announcement followed agreement between the Governor and the Minister of Finance Enoch Godongwana.

Godongwana had further consulted with the President and Cabinet on the decision.
The new target immediately replaces the previous target range of between 3 and 6%, and will be implemented over the next two years. –SAnews.gov.za 
 

 

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President Ramaphosa hails G20 Social Summit as ‘possibly the best of all G20 summits’

Source: Government of South Africa

President Ramaphosa hails G20 Social Summit as ‘possibly the best of all G20 summits’

President Cyril Ramaphosa has described the G20 Social Summit as “possibly the best of all the G20 summits” praising it as a global gathering defined by inclusiveness, unity and the spirit of Ubuntu.

Delivering his address at the Birchwood Hotel & OR Tambo Conference Centre in Ekurhuleni, on Thursday, President Ramaphosa said the Summit’s strength lay in the breadth of voices brought together. 

He added with humour that South Africa was effectively hosting a “G-million,” after some had joked that the country was hosting a G100 and G1000 due to the number of related G-processes happening alongside the main summit. 

“That is true. We are having a G-million because we are about inclusiveness, bringing people together. And this summit is possibly the best of all the G20 summits that we are going to have. I want to applaud you and thank you all for being here. Thank you for your contributions which have ended up with a beautiful declaration. Beautiful things are happening in South Africa,” the President said. 

Ramaphosa arrived to loud cheers from delegates, who welcomed him with a reception fit for a G20 President. The atmosphere set the tone for a session focused on unity, people-centred development and reshaping global cooperation.

A summit rooted in history and solidarity

The President drew parallels between this year’s Social Summit and two historic gatherings held in 1955, the Bandung Conference, where the Global South found its collective voice, and the Congress of the People in Kliptown, where South Africans adopted the Freedom Charter.

He said the 2025 Summit should similarly be remembered as a moment where ordinary people across nations helped shape a new direction for global cooperation.

“One of our greetings, sanibonani, literally means ‘we see each other’,” he said, invoking the principle of Ubuntu. 

“We are acknowledging the personhood, value and dignity of the one we are greeting. This is the spirit in which this G20 Social Summit is being held.”

People speaking for themselves

Echoing the deliberations from civil society, President Ramaphosa said the summit ensured global action would be informed by the voices of those most affected by poverty, inequality, climate change and exclusion, instead of decisions being made on their behalf.

He emphasised South Africa’s commitment to ensuring that developing nations’ priorities, including just energy transitions, financial reform, inclusive trade and protection of the vulnerable, remain at the heart of the G20 Presidency.

Over the past year, delegates from Women20, Youth20, Media20, Labour20, Parliament20, Business20, and other formations contributed to what President Ramaphosa called a “beautiful declaration” that will feed directly into the G20 Leaders’ Summit, later this week.

Call for global solidarity

With today marking World Children’s Day, President Ramaphosa stressed the urgency of global investment in children, women and marginalised communities. 

He warned that gender-based violence remains a crisis that undermines development and fractures societies, calling for men and boys to be active partners in challenging harmful norms.

“No society can thrive for as long as gender-based violence and femicide continues and the agency of women is denied. The violence perpetrated by men against women erodes the social fabric of nations. Here in South Africa, we have declared gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF) a national crisis. 

“The collective perspectives that have been expressed at this Summit on all these issues and more will enable governments and decision-makers to better understand people’s practical, lived experiences,” he said.

The President said the G20 Social Summit must now serve as the compass that guides the G20 Leaders’ Summit, a reliable tool ensuring that decisions reflect the needs of all nations, not only the most powerful.

“No matter the headwinds, no matter the geopolitical shifts, we will keep our eyes fixed on the horizon of progress and shared prosperity. We will set a new course for the world, and we will create a new future for its people,” the President said. 

As the crowd once again erupted in applause, the message was unmistakable – South Africa’s G20 Presidency is not just historic; it is redefining the meaning of global cooperation through unity, humanity and inclusion. – SAnews.gov.za

DikelediM

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G20: weather outlook

Source: Government of South Africa

G20: weather outlook

As South Africa prepares to welcome the world for its first-ever G20 Leaders’ Summit in Gauteng this weekend, delegates can look forward to a cool, partly cloudy backdrop, with the chance of scattered showers for this historic gathering. 

The weather outlook for the weekend shows partly cloudy and cool conditions for the central and eastern parts of the country. 

“It will be warm in places in the northern parts of Limpopo, as well as into the lowveld of Mpumalanga, with isolated to scattered showers and thundershowers possible from the afternoon over Gauteng, Limpopo, North West, Mpumalanga and the eastern parts of the Free State,” South African Weather Service (SAWS) Meteorologist, Lehlohonolo Thobela said on Thursday.

Global leaders will gather in Johannesburg on Saturday and Sunday to discuss key economic and financial issues under South Africa’s Presidency theme: ‘Solidarity, Equality and Sustainability’.

“The area [Gauteng] will be affected by a surface high pressure in the east, with a surface trough over the western interior of the country. 

“The influence of these weather systems usually results in thundershowers over the eastern parts of the country, which is common the for spring and summer seasons. However, the weather conditions will be better than the previous week,” Thobela said.

Isolated to scattered showers and thundershowers are possible over Gauteng as a whole and it will be a bit windy in Johannesburg on Sunday.

The summit will be taking place at NASREC, also known as the Johannesburg Expo Centre. Weather conditions for the area are follows:

  • Friday, 21 November: Min/max – 12/23 C; cloudy at times with a 30% chance of storms.
  • Saturday, 22 November: Min/max – 11/23 C; cloudy conditions and a 30% chance of storms in the afternoon.
  • Sunday, 23 November: Min/max – 13/25 C; partly cloudy becoming cloudy in the evening with a 30% chance of storms in the late afternoon and early evening.

The public is advised to stay informed by monitoring weather warnings and updates from SAWS website (www.weathersa.co.za), and broadcasts on local radios and television channels. 

Furthermore, intermediate updates may be followed on X (@SAWeatherServic), Facebook (South African Weather Service) or other SAWS-supported social media platforms. – SAnews.gov.za

nosihle

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NW police arrest 994 suspects during Operation Shanela II

Source: Government of South Africa

NW police arrest 994 suspects during Operation Shanela II

Police in the North West have arrested 994 suspects during the weekly Joint Law Enforcement high density Operation Shanela II, conducted between Monday, 10 November and Sunday, 16 November 2025, across all five districts.

The arrests build a strong foundation for the Safer Festive Season Operations, aimed at addressing the heightened risk of criminality associated with increased movement of people and elevated social activity during the holiday period.

According to the police, out of the 994 arrested suspects, 366 were arrested by the detectives after being traced from circulated wanted suspects’ lists. The operation also led to the arrest of 15 undocumented foreign nationals.

The operations also addressed identified crime generators through compliance inspections to enforce the provisions of the Liquor and Second-Hand Goods Acts. 

The multi-disciplinary teams conducted compliance inspections targeting identified crime generators, including liquor outlets and second-hand goods dealers. A total of 151 licensed liquor outlets were inspected, resulting in 56 arrests for illegal liquor trading, while large quantities of liquor were confiscated. 

“Moreover, the operations led to the confiscation of a variety of drugs, firearms, ammunition, vehicles, precious metals and tobacco products,” the police said in a statement.

In Dr Kenneth Kaunda District, the Provincial Anti-Gang Unit, Provincial Proactive Drug Operations, Ventersdorp Crime Prevention and Community Police Forum (CPF) members executed search and seizure warrants at Boikhutsong and Goedgevonden villages, and Tshing location, Ventersdorp on Friday, 14 November 2025. 

Silengene Tokwana (35) and Molefi Elliot Sakhachane (35) were arrested for dealing in drugs and possession of suspected illegal substances. Police seized dagga and crystal meth with estimated street value of R32 000. 

The pair appeared in the Ventersdorp Magistrate’s Court on Monday, 17 November 2025, and were remanded in custody until 20 and 24 November2025, respectively.

“A multidisciplinary Inter-Provincial roadblock was conducted on Friday, 14 November 2025, on the N12 road between Potchefstroom and Fochville culminated in the arrest of five individuals for contravening Section 49 (1)(a) of the Immigration Act, 2002. (Act No. 13 of 2002). 

In a separate operation, a multidisciplinary Inter-Provincial roadblock was conducted on the N12 between Potchefstroom and Fochville on Friday, 14 November 2005, resulted in the arrest of five suspects for contravening immigration laws. 

Two others were arrested for drug-related offences after police confiscated about 8kg of dagga. Nine traffic fines were also issued to motorists.

In Bojanala Sub-District 2, Rustenburg police responded on Saturday, 15 November, to a local hospital, where a man was found with multiple stab wounds on his upper body.

“Initial investigations indicated that the deceased, Dumile Patrick Mthunzana (45) was fatally stabbed during an argument. The police tracked down and arrested the suspect shortly after the incident.

“Phathilizwe Malongwane (46) appeared before the Rustenburg Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday, 18 November 2025, on a charge of murder. Malongwane was remanded in custody until his next court appearance on Thursday, 27 November 2025,” the SAPS said.

The Acting Provincial Commissioner of the North West, Major General (Dr) Ryno Naidoo commended all law-enforcement agencies for working together in enhancing safety and security across the province. – SAnews.gov.za

Edwin

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