OHSC warns of bogus inspectors

Source: Government of South Africa

OHSC warns of bogus inspectors

The Office of Health Standards Compliance (OHSC) has warned the public of individuals impersonating OHSC inspectors and soliciting money from unsuspecting healthcare practitioners.

This after the OHSC received reports of an individual attempting to schedule an inspection at a healthcare facility.

“It is alleged that the impersonator asserted that payment would resolve any non-compliance findings.

“This is contrary to the OHSC ethical standards and core values because real inspectors will not accept cash, gifts, or any form of personal payment from facilities, staff, or members of the public in exchange for inspection results or regulatory outcomes,” the regulator said.

The OHSC confirmed that no “authorised inspection had been scheduled and that the individual was not acting on behalf of the organisation”.

“Healthcare establishments and practitioners nationwide are urged to remain vigilant of bogus or suspicious inspectors and verify the identity of anyone claiming to represent the OHSC. Authorised inspectors carry a valid OHSC identification card or official documentation signed by the Chief Executive Officer.

“Lawful and authorised inspection outcomes cannot be influenced by payment or any personal benefit. 

“The OHSC remains committed to safeguarding the integrity and credibility of healthcare regulation and appreciates the continued cooperation of healthcare practitioners, facilities and the public in combating fraud,” the statement continued.

Report any suspicious and unethical conduct, including impersonation, fraud, bribery or corruption by inspectors to the OHSC Fraud and Ethics Hotline on 0800 003 231 or by email at office@thehotline.co.za. – SAnews.gov.za

 

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United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) chief hails refugee courage and Ethiopia’s inclusion on World Refugee Day

Source: APO

Ethiopia is one of Africa’s largest refugee-hosting countries, home to over 1.1 million refugees and asylum-seekers, including more than 45,000 refugees who have fled the conflict in neighbouring Sudan since April 2023. Ura settlement, in Ethiopia’s northwestern Benishangul Gumuz region, hosts more than 14,500 Sudanese refugees, who live alongside the local community and have access to the same services.

“Ura is more than just a refugee settlement,” Salih said at a World Refugee Day event that brought together the President of the Benishangul Gumuz region, refugees, local residents, government officials, and UN and regional partners. “It is a powerful example of what becomes possible when protection is combined with inclusion, when humanitarian action is linked to long-term solutions, and when refugees and host communities are given the opportunity to build their futures together.”

“On this World Refugee Day, we pay tribute to refugees and the host communities: to their courage, their resilience, and their determination to rebuild their lives despite enormous adversity,” Salih added. “Yet resilience alone is not enough. Refugees should not be expected to survive on resilience forever, nor should they spend decades waiting in limbo, dependent on humanitarian assistance, with little prospect of a better future.”

“We must invest in solutions. We must support host countries and communities. We must expand access to education, livelihoods, and documentation. And we must ensure that refugees themselves are active partners in shaping the policies and programmes that affect their lives,” he said.

At Ura settlement, Salih visited a primary school where young Sudanese and Ethiopian children learn side by side. He also met Sudanese refugee entrepreneurs who had opened businesses to support themselves and their families, as well as contributing to the local economy.

Among them was Mohyadin Ahmed Mohammed Ali, 37, who fled fighting in Sudan’s Al Jazeera State with his family, settling in Ura six months after first arriving in Ethiopia. A former merchant in Sudan, Ali slowly rebuilt his business in Ethiopia, initially by collecting and selling plastic bags before saving enough to open a small convenience store in Ura where he buys and sells food and other essential goods.

“When I came to Ethiopia, I got back to what I had been doing before. Business is getting better, and I don’t feel much difference from my status in Sudan [workwise],” Ali explained. “We don’t feel like foreigners. The country has shown us respect and consideration; one doesn’t need to go anywhere else. No one harasses us, and we can buy [and sell] like anyone else.”

Ali added that local officials have raised the possibility of applying for a business license, which he said would make it easier for him to travel to other parts of the country to buy goods and sell them in his store. He also highlighted the benefits of running a business alongside the local community in Ura.

“As a trader, if you do not mix and interact with local residents, other traders, and the community generally, you cannot trade,” he said. “I want to work for my children, so they can grow up and be educated.”

Two days earlier, in Addis Ababa, the High Commissioner joined Government ministers and officials to launch Ethiopia’s Makatet Roadmap – a framework for shifting from solely humanitarian relief to long-term development, transforming traditional camps into self-reliant urban settlements, integrated with national service delivery systems.

“With the launch of the Makatet Roadmap, the Government of Ethiopia transitioned from short-term humanitarian management to an inclusive development model that treats refugees as active contributors to our national growth,” said Ethiopia’s Minister of Finance, Ahmed Shide, at the launch event.

Back in Ura settlement, Salih said that such inclusive approaches were especially necessary at a time when humanitarian resources are under strain, and public debates about refugees become increasingly polarized.

“Here in Ura, you are showing that another path is possible. Refugees and host communities are proving every day that inclusion is not only possible – it works,” he said.

The High Commissioner also highlighted next month’s 75th anniversary of the 1951 Refugee Convention, which enshrines the “simple but profound promise” that anyone fleeing conflict or persecution has the right to seek safety in another country.

“At a time when that right is increasingly under pressure, we must defend it – firmly and collectively,” he concluded. “The world needs more examples like Ethiopia: examples that demonstrate that refugee protection and national development can advance hand in hand.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

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Africa Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum (AWIEF) Launches Pitch n Grow 2026 – A Women Entrepreneurship Pitch Competition

Source: APO


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The Africa Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum (AWIEF) (https://www.AWIEForum.org/) announces the launch of Pitch n Grow, a flagship annual women entrepreneurship pitch competition programme for identifying, developing, and amplifying the most promising women-led ventures across all African nations.

Selected finalists will pitch live at the AWIEF 2026 Conference in Cape Town, on 10 and 11 November 2026.

Each year, the competition adopts a new strategic theme aligned with AWIEF’s continental priorities. The 2026 theme is “Deep Roots, Digital Futures.

Africa’s greatest competitive advantage is its depth: deep knowledge of local contexts, deep understanding of communities, and deep experience of challenges the rest of the world is yet to face. This theme challenges women-led ventures to apply deep technology not as an import, but as a tool grown from African soil.

Who Can Apply?
Applications are accepted from women founders and co-founders across Africa who are building ventures in the following priority innovation sectors to solve African development challenges:

  • Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
  • AgriTech
  • HealthTech
  • Clean Energy
  • Water Technology
  • Biotech
  • FinTech
  • Cybersecurity
  • EdTech
  • Smart Cities
  • Circular Economy
  • Frontier Technologies

Competition Tracks
Participants can apply to one of three tracks based on their stage of business:

Pre-Venture – Concept-stage ventures with a prototype or proof of concept.
Early-Stage – Registered startups with active customers and revenue generation.
Growth-Stage – Scaling ventures with proven traction and regional expansion.

Benefits and Prizes
Selected participants will gain access to:

  • Expert-led training bootcamps
  • Mentorship from industry leaders, investors, and entrepreneurs
  • Exposure to investors, ecosystem partners, and media
  • An opportunity to pitch live at the AWIEF 2026 Conference in Cape Town
  • Travel and accommodation support for finalists
  • Cash prizes and global recognition

Key Dates

  • Applications Open: 22 June 2026
  • Orientation Webinars: 1 – 7 July 2026
  • Application Deadline: 20 July 2026
  • Bootcamp: August 2026
  • Finalists Announced: 20 September 2026
  • Live Finals at AWIEF 2026 Conference, Cape Town, 10 – 11 November 2026

Application Submission
Applications are submitted before 20 July 2026 only through this official link: http://apo-opa.co/4g0iUog

If you are building the future through innovation and technology, this is your opportunity to showcase your venture on one of Africa’s leading platforms for women entrepreneurs.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Africa Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum (AWIEF).

African Teams Are Winning the World Cup’s Battle for Attention (By Libby Allen)

Source: APO – Report:

By Libby Allen, Vice President: Brand & Creative, APO Group (https://APO-opa.com).

I spend my working life thinking about how brands build a name for themselves across borders. One of the standout lessons I’ve seen this year hasn’t come from a company, but from African teams at the World Cup.

Branding is usually seen as aesthetics: a logo, a colour palette. But the brands that perform do harder work. They find exactly what is theirs, and they have the confidence to put it forward without borrowing or hedging. This World Cup is full of teams doing just that.

The walk from the plane

Look at DR Congo. When the squad landed in Houston, the players walked through the airport in black suits with leopard-print details, leopard brooches, and matching bags, designed by Congolese designer Alvin Junior Mak, of JMAKxPARIS. The collection is a tribute to the 1974 Léopards, the first team from sub-Saharan Africa to reach a World Cup, and to La Sape, Congo’s tradition of dress as resistance, expression, dignity. This is the country’s first World Cup in 52 years, and the squad arrived under strain, with some quarantined during the ongoing Ebola outbreak at home, and many supporters unable to travel. That could have been the dominant narrative, but Congo used one of the world’s biggest stages to lead with creativity and heritage, not hardship.

Côte d’Ivoire arrived in Philadelphia in saffron tie-dye blazers by the Ivorian designer Ibrahim Fernandez, their elephant motifs framing the squad as an expression of Ivorian craft. Sénégal came in forest-green tailoring by Xakeb, with shoes by the Dakar maker Cheikh Mbacké Thiam. In each case, the designer came from the country represented.

Countries have used arrivals and ceremonies to project who they are for as long as global events have existed. The tradition is old. What’s newer is the confidence behind it, the scale it now reaches, and the global appetite that rewards it.

Stories that move markets

An enormous national branding moment came from Nigeria in 2018, when its World Cup shirt with Nike became a global phenomenon. Drawn from the Super Eagles’ famous 1994 kit, it took three million pre-orders before it arrived in stores – a record for an African team – and sold out within minutes of launch. It was later shortlisted for the Design Museum’s Beazley Design of the Year, alongside Gucci and Burberry. The identity was unmistakably Nigerian. The reach was Nike’s. Neither side could have produced that result alone. The story must be genuinely yours, and the right partner can help it travel. The challenge is making sure the value comes home too.

The story is the brand

On the pitch, the most powerful story, for me, comes from Cabo Verde. On their World Cup debut, the Blue Sharks held Spain, the reigning European champions, to a goalless draw. Their 40-year-old goalkeeper, Vozinha, produced the performance of his life and left the field in tears. By the next morning, millions of people who had never heard his name knew it. His social media following had grown from tens of thousands into millions, with no campaign behind it and no ad budget. Reputation grew because the story was true and people wanted to share it. The best piece of brand-building in football this month was a real story, told at the right moment. You can buy attention. You can’t buy authenticity.

Making the moment last

These are all major moments, but growing and sustaining a reputation takes infrastructure. I’ve seen this through APO Group’s work with the Global Africa Business Initiative (GABI) and its Unstoppable Africa platform, held each year alongside the UN General Assembly in New York. Convened by the United Nations Global Compact, GABI brings African founders and investors, from sectors including sport and the creative economy, into the same room as global partners, so that ideas and investment can move in both directions, on African terms.

It rests on the same truth the World Cup is showing. Africa’s business, culture, and sport shape how the continent is seen, and they do it together, which carries real commercial weight: people invest in and travel to the places they feel they understand.

The teams making the strongest impression have not been the biggest or the richest. They have been the clearest about who they are. Some do that through design. Some move us. Some work because they partner to scale.

The question isn’t whether African brands can command global attention. They already do. The opportunity is to keep building the platforms and partnerships that let those stories travel, without losing what makes them worth telling. Know who you are, and the world becomes your audience, not your author.

Libby Allen is Vice President: Brand & Creative at APO Group. Based in Cape Town, South Africa, she leads marketing and creative services for the consultancy and its clients across African markets.

– on behalf of APO Group Insights.

Media Contact:
marie@apo-opa.com  

About APO Group:
Founded in 2007 by Nicolas Pompigne-Mognard, APO Group is the communications consultancy built for performance – combining strategic advisory, on-the-ground execution, and guaranteed visibility across all 54 African markets. Its owned newswire, Africa Newsroom, secures placement on 250+ Africa-focused news sites, connecting organisations directly with journalists, analysts, investors, and policymakers worldwide.

Recognised internationally for communications excellence including SABRE, Davos Communications, and World Business Outlook distinctions, APO Group partners with global and African organisations to deliver communications that perform. Clients include the African Development Bank Group, Africa CDC, Afreximbank, NFL, Nestlé, Emirates, Canon, Western Union, GITEX Global, and Cassava Technologies.

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Cameroon develops energy accounts to drive smarter energy, economic and environmental policies

Source: APO – Report:

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The United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), through its Subregional Office for Central Africa and the African Centre for Statistics, is providing technical support to Cameroon in the development of energy accounts.

In partnership with the National Institute of Statistics (NIS) of Cameroon and the World Bank through the HISWACA Project, ECA is facilitating a workshop on identifying requirements for the development of energy accounts in Cameroon, taking place in Douala from 22 to 26 June 2026.

The workshop brings together key government institutions, specialized agencies in the energy sector, and technical and financial partners to jointly identify available data as well as the technical, methodological and institutional requirements necessary for the compilation of energy accounts in accordance with the System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA), the internationally recognized statistical framework adopted by the United Nations to measure the interactions between the economy and the environment.

Energy accounts are a modern statistical tool that links data on energy extraction, production, transformation, consumption and trade with the country’s economic activities, as well as information on residuals released into the environment. They therefore provide an integrated picture of the interrelationships between energy, the economy and the environment.

In practical terms, energy accounts help answer critical policy questions: How much energy is produced? Which sectors consume the most energy? How is energy transformed and used? What is the contribution of energy to wealth creation? How can the effects of energy policies on economic growth, employment and greenhouse gas emissions be measured? Energy accounts also help inform decisions regarding the investments required to support the country’s energy transition.

In a context marked by growing energy demand, energy security imperatives and climate change challenges, the availability of integrated and reliable statistics is becoming an essential tool for evidence-based policymaking and investment planning.

The development of energy accounts is fully aligned with the objectives of Cameroon Vision 2035 and the National Development Strategy 2020–2030 (NDS30), which identify structural transformation, sustainable industrialization and the energy transition among the country’s key development priorities.

Energy accounts will also contribute to monitoring progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly those related to access to affordable and clean energy, climate action and the sustainable management of natural resources.

Beyond their statistical dimension, energy accounts will provide Cameroon with a robust framework for assessing the effectiveness of energy policies, strengthening coherence between economic planning and natural resource management, and better integrating environmental considerations into public decision-making.

The Douala workshop marks a foundational step in the process of producing energy accounts. It aims, in particular, to identify user needs, assess available data, highlight existing gaps and establish an operational roadmap for the future compilation of energy accounts.

This initiative is being implemented within the framework of the National Plan for the Development of Environmental-Economic Accounting (NPDEEA), adopted by the Government of Cameroon in 2023 as the reference framework for the implementation of the System of Environmental-Economic Accounting. The NPDEEA identifies energy accounts as one of the priority areas for the operational rollout of environmental-economic accounting in Cameroon.

Through this activity, ECA continues to support the Government of Cameroon in strengthening national statistical capacities and advancing the development of environmental-economic accounting.

This support includes methodological guidance aligned with international standards, the mobilization of specialized expertise, including from the United Kingdom Office for National Statistics (ONS), as well as continuous technical assistance throughout the process of developing Cameroon’s energy accounts.

– on behalf of United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA).

Deputy President courts investors at China supply chain expo

Source: Government of South Africa

Deputy President courts investors at China supply chain expo

Deputy President Paul Mashatile has presented South Africa’s value proposition to leading Chinese and international supply chain companies at the Fourth China International Supply Chain Expo (CISCE).

“We invite Chinese and international partners to work with us to position Africa not merely as a consumer market but as a competitive production base, a sourcing destination, and an important node in global supply chains,” the Deputy President said on Monday in China during his working visit.

Addressing leading Chinese and international supply chain companies, Mashatile said South Africa sees significant opportunities for collaboration in three priority areas: agriculture and food systems; critical minerals and the green economy; and advanced manufacturing, logistics and automotive value chains.

“Our presence here today reflects South Africa’s unwavering commitment to deepening our comprehensive economic partnership with China, aimed at advancing trade, investment, and long-term industrial cooperation.

“An important pillar of our engagement is the implementation of the Framework Agreement on Economic Partnership for Shared Prosperity, or CADEPA, signed earlier this year by our respective trade ministers,” the Deputy President said.

The implementation of the agreement is supported by the zero-tariff preference scheme that came into effect on 1 May 2026, allowing qualifying South African exports to enter the Chinese market duty-free.

“First, South Africa is an attractive investment destination, supported by sophisticated industrial capabilities, a world-class financial sector, and well-established logistics infrastructure. 

“We remain committed to reforms aimed at improving the ease of doing business, accelerating infrastructure development, and strengthening industrial competitiveness, through the use of Artificial Intelligence (Al),” the Deputy President said.

Mashatile said South Africa is also a reliable source of high-value products and critical inputs required for modern industries and the global energy transition.

“We are endowed with significant mineral resources, including platinum group metals, manganese, and chromium, while also offering world-class agricultural products, advanced manufacturing capabilities and growing strengths in services and digital trade.

“Third, South Africa serves as a gateway to the African continent. Through the African Continental Free Trade Area, investors located in South Africa gain access to a market of more than 1.3 billion people. This presents significant opportunities for regional value chain development and industrial expansion across Africa,” the Deputy President said.

CISCE, the world’s first national-level exhibition dedicated to supply chains, brings together governments, businesses and industry players to build stronger global industrial and supply chain partnerships.

The expo links upstream, midstream and downstream sectors, while encouraging collaboration between large and small enterprises, industry, academia, research institutions and application partners.

“South Africa is therefore positioning itself as a reliable supply base for critical inputs, a destination for industrial beneficiation and an ideal partner for co-production.

“South Africa produces high-quality citrus, avocados, stone fruits, wines, and macadamia nuts, which now benefit from zero customs duties under the CADEPA framework. 

“We encourage Chinese importers and distributors to establish long-term sourcing partnerships with South African producers,” Mashatile said.

Mashatile called on Chinese enterprises to explore opportunities for joint ventures, local beneficiation and downstream manufacturing in South Africa.

“South Africa possesses substantial reserves of platinum group metals and other strategic minerals required for fuel cells, renewable energy technologies, and energy storage solutions. 

“South Africa’s industrial base offers attractive opportunities for component manufacturing, machinery production and export-oriented partnerships serving both domestic and African markets,” the Deputy President said.

He stressed that economic cooperation should support job creation, skills development, industrial growth and environmental sustainability, while delivering tangible benefits for people.

“As we shape the future of global supply chains, we must ensure that our partnerships remain inclusive and sustainable.

“South Africa reaffirms its commitment to strengthening economic cooperation with China. We are determined to position our country as both a preferred destination for investment and a reliable source of value within global supply chains,” Mashatile said. – SAnews.gov.za

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Acting Police Minister briefed on the SAPS’ state of operational readiness

Source: Government of South Africa

Acting Police Minister briefed on the SAPS’ state of operational readiness

Acting Police Minister Firoz Cachalia is this morning meeting with the management of the South African Police Service (SAPS) to receive a comprehensive briefing on the SAPS’s state of operational readiness ahead of the planned demonstrations scheduled for 30 June 2026.

The Acting Minister was accompanied by the Acting National Commissioner, Lieutenant General Puleng Dimpane.

He received detailed presentations on national and provincial operational plans aimed at ensuring that all demonstrations take place in a safe, secure and peaceful manner.

The meeting was attended by Deputy National Commissioners, Provincial Commissioners and Divisional Commissioners from the operational and intelligence environments.

Following the briefing, the Acting Minister expressed satisfaction with the measures put in place by the SAPS.

In the coming week, the Acting Minister, together with the Deputy Ministers of Police, will meet with the Minister of Defence and the Premiers of all nine provinces to reinforce effective coordination and monitoring among all relevant security role players, and to ensure adequate support ahead of the planned demonstrations.

In addition, they will meet with representatives of the private security industry, recognising their important role as force multipliers in enhancing safety and security.

The Ministry of Police will also conduct visits to identified areas that have experienced heightened levels of instability to assess operational readiness and reinforce policing efforts.

The Acting Minister, however, expressed confidence that the SAPS is operationally prepared to uphold and enforce the law.

“While the constitutional right to peaceful protest will be respected, no acts of lawlessness, violence, intimidation or criminality will be tolerated. Weekly enforcement operations remain ongoing to verify the legal status of foreign nationals in the country.

“These operations are aimed at ensuring that all foreign nationals residing in South Africa are in the country legally and are in possession of valid documentation. Where violations of the law are identified, appropriate action will be taken in accordance with the law,” said Minister Cachalia.

The Acting Minister urged all Provincial Commissioners to enforce the law without fear or favour and to respond swiftly and decisively to any acts of incitement, violence, intimidation or criminality.

He assured all South Africans that their safety and security remain a priority and that the SAPS remains fully committed to protecting all people in the Republic and upholding the Constitution by maintaining law and order while safeguarding the rights of everyone.

Daily operational monitoring and assessments will continue throughout the week to ensure stability across the country and to enable law enforcement agencies to respond swiftly to any emerging threats. – SAnews.gov.za

 

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Free State reports a successful voter registration weekend

Source: Government of South Africa

Free State reports a successful voter registration weekend

The South African Police Service (SAPS) in the Free State says the past voter registration weekend was conducted successfully across the province, with no major security incidents reported.

“The peaceful and orderly conduct of the registration process is a testament to the commitment of Free State residents to democracy, responsible citizenship and respect for the rule of law.

“Communities throughout the province conducted themselves with discipline and dignity, contributing significantly to the success of this important electoral process,” the police said in a statement.

The Provincial Commissioner of the Free State, Lieutenant General Thabang Lesia, extended his sincere appreciation to community members, political parties, electoral officials, community structures and stakeholders who played a role in ensuring a peaceful environment at voter registration stations.

“We are grateful to the people of the Free State for their exemplary behaviour and cooperation throughout the registration weekend. Their commitment to peaceful participation in the democratic process made our task much easier and contributed to the overall success of the operation,” said Lieutenant General Lesia.

The Provincial Commissioner also expressed his heartfelt gratitude to SAPS members who worked tirelessly over the weekend to safeguard communities, registration stations and election-related activities across the province.

“The SAPS remains committed to working closely with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), government departments, community organisations and all stakeholders to maintain peace and stability as the country moves towards the upcoming elections.

“The Free State SAPS will continue to uphold its constitutional mandate of protecting all people, securing communities and ensuring that democratic processes are conducted in a safe and peaceful environment,” the police said. – SAnews.gov.za

 

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Parliament set for a busy week before constituency period

Source: Government of South Africa

Parliament set for a busy week before constituency period

Parliament has entered a crucial week as the National Assembly (NA) and National Council of Provinces (NCOP) prepare to conclude key legislative and oversight work before members break for their constituency period.

The National Assembly is expected to wrap up its second-term programme on Tuesday with the consideration of the 2026 Appropriation Bill, a critical piece of legislation that allocates funding from the National Revenue Fund for government departments and programmes during the 2026/27 financial year.

The Bill also sets conditions for spending, ahead of the next financial cycle and is regarded as one of the most significant items on Parliament’s annual agenda.

In addition to the budget legislation, the Assembly will consider a report from the Portfolio Committee on Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities recommending candidates to fill vacancies in the Commission for Gender Equality (CGE). 

The appointments follow a Constitutional Court injunction and form part of Parliament’s constitutional responsibility to ensure the commission remains fully functional.

Lawmakers will also decide on two draft resolutions arising from mini plenary debates held last month. 

One proposal, raised by Member of Parliament (MP) Sihle Lonzi, calls for a parliamentary inquiry into the capacity of South Africa’s post-school education and training sector to accommodate prospective students. The second, introduced by MP Vuyo Zungula, seeks stronger parliamentary oversight to address the non-recognition of certain traditional and indigenous communities as legitimate kingships.

Meanwhile, the NCOP faces a packed schedule that includes policy debates on several departmental budget votes, legislative deliberations and a question-and-answer session with President Cyril Ramaphosa.

On Tuesday, delegates will debate Budget Votes for the Departments of Trade, Industry and Competition, as well as Land Reform and Rural Development. Further discussions on Higher Education are scheduled for Wednesday.

One of the week’s most anticipated events will take place on Thursday when President Ramaphosa appears before the NCOP to respond to questions from permanent delegates. 

Issues expected to dominate the session include illegal immigration, criminal infiltration and government efforts to disrupt illicit economic activities.

Parliament’s oversight role will also be in focus throughout the week. On Wednesday, the Impeachment Committee conducting the Section 89 inquiry is expected to consider its draft terms of reference and discuss the appointment of evidence leaders.

On Thursday, chairpersons of Parliament’s peace and security oversight committees will brief the media and stakeholders as part of a broader initiative aimed at strengthening public accountability. 

The engagement will bring together committee leaders responsible for correctional services, justice and security matters to discuss issues that cut across multiple portfolios.

Members of the National Assembly will begin their constituency period on 29 June, followed by NCOP delegates on 8 July, marking a temporary pause in parliamentary sittings as representatives return to engage communities across the country. – SAnews.gov.za

 

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Transnet issues RFP for establishment of rolling stock Leasing Company

Source: Government of South Africa

Transnet issues RFP for establishment of rolling stock Leasing Company

Transnet has issued a Request for Proposal (RFP) to two shortlisted bidders for the establishment of a rolling stock Leasing Company (LeaseCo), marking a key milestone in South Africa’s rail reform programme.

This follows the successful conclusion of the Request for Qualification (RFQ) process, which was launched in April 2025 and received 14 submissions.

In a statement on Monday, Transnet said the RFP marks another step towards a more competitive, inclusive and efficient rail ecosystem that supports growth and improves logistics performance.

LeaseCo will acquire, manage and lease rolling stock to domestic and regional markets, helping address shortages in reliable rail equipment.

The company is a cornerstone of the rail reform agenda, aimed at modernising freight operations, attracting private investment and widening participation in rail operations.

By improving asset use and access to rolling stock, LeaseCo will support established and emerging Train Operating Companies (TOCs), while strengthening regional supply chains.

It will operate as a commercially viable, independently governed leasing entity.

Transnet will contribute a ring-fenced fleet of rolling stock assets as equity, as well as Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) capabilities through Transnet Engineering.

The private sector majority partner will provide capital, technical expertise and operational capability to revitalise and expand the fleet.

“Significant unmet freight demand, driven by a shortage of available rolling stock, presents a compelling opportunity for a dedicated leasing entity. LeaseCo represents a transformative initiative primed to modernise Africa’s rail system, mobilise private capital, and enhance the reliability of freight logistics.

“With the significant demand from TOCs, LeaseCo is well positioned as an appealing investment opportunity,” Transnet Group Chief Executive Michelle Phillips said. 

Transnet is engaging newly licensed TOCs to assess their rolling stock needs and has secured five TOCs for LeaseCo’s services. Demand is expected to grow as the Transnet Rail Infrastructure Manager (TRIM) allocates more network slots to operators. –SAnews.gov.za

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