South Africa's top cop, National Police Commissioner Fannie Masemola, was served with a warrant on Wednesday ordering him to appear in court on April 21 in connection with an allegedly corrupt contract to provide health and well-being services to police officers.
Twelve other senior officers, including a major-general and several brigadiers, were arrested the same day by the National Prosecuting Authority's anti-corruption unit at the police's national headquarters in Pretoria, AP News reported.
All twelve face charges of corruption and fraud. The specific charges against Masemola himself remain a mystery: his spokesperson declined to detail them, and a spokesperson for state prosecutors did the same.
Police spokesperson Brig. Athlenda Mathe said at a court appearance for the other officers: "He has taken note of the charges brought against him, and he has pledged his full cooperation."
Cooperation is a low bar when the entire leadership structure of a nation's police force appears rotten from the inside out.
A Scandal That Goes All the Way Up
The investigation centers on a multi-million-dollar police contract that was ultimately canceled. At the heart of it sits businessman Vusi "Cat" Matlala, who is accused of corruption alongside the arrested officers. Matlala is already under arrest and being held at a maximum-security prison on attempted murder and other charges in an unrelated case.
One of the arrested officers, Brig. Rachel Matjeng testified to having a romantic relationship with Matlala. She denied taking money and gifts from him for corrupt reasons, claiming he gave her money and gifts, which included a weight loss drug, only because they were lovers. Parliament held special hearings into the allegations, during which Matlala testified he had paid a former police minister around $30,000.
The layers here are worth cataloging:
- The national police commissioner faces a court warrant.
- Twelve senior officers are in custody on corruption and fraud charges.
- The police minister has already been suspended over alleged links to organized crime.
- A provincial police commissioner publicly accused his own leadership of criminal infiltration.
- The key businessman at the center of the contract scandal is already in a maximum-security prison on unrelated violent charges.
This is not a single bad actor. This is institutional capture.
The Press Conference That Broke It Open
The inquiry into police corruption stems from a dramatic press conference last year by Lt-Gen. Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, the KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Commissioner. Mkhwanazi accused Police Minister Senzo Mchunu and senior police officers of having links with organized crime. He claimed that criminal syndicates and drug cartels had infiltrated the police at the highest level.
President Cyril Ramaphosa responded by ordering a judge-led inquiry. He had already suspended Mchunu, who had been accused of illegally ordering the closure of a specialist crime-fighting unit to protect alleged criminals that it was investigating.
An interim report from that inquiry has now been handed to Ramaphosa and recommends criminal investigations against several other police officers. The inquiry is due to continue next month.
Ramaphosa's office issued a statement saying the police force "remains stable and able to continue fulfilling its policing mandate." That is a generous characterization of an institution whose commissioner is headed to court and whose minister has been suspended for alleged ties to the criminals he was supposed to fight.
A Pattern That Predates This President
South Africa has traveled this road before. Former Police Commissioner Jackie Selebi was convicted of corruption in 2010. He died in 2015. Former President Jacob Zuma resigned in 2018 because of graft allegations, and his tenure was marred by a period of widespread corruption at state-owned companies.
The rot in South African governance is not new. What is striking about this chapter is how deeply it has penetrated the very institution tasked with enforcing the law. When your police commissioner, your police minister, and a dozen senior officers are all entangled in the same web of fraud, the question stops being whether corruption exists and becomes whether legitimate law enforcement exists at all.
Ramaphosa deployed the army on the streets in some areas of South Africa earlier this month to help with law enforcement. That decision takes on a different character when you consider that the police leadership meant to handle public safety was allegedly busy enriching itself through fraudulent contracts.
What Comes Next
Masemola's April 21 court date will be closely watched, though the refusal of both police and prosecutorial spokespeople to even name the charges suggests the case may still be expanding. The judicial inquiry continues next month. The interim report has already recommended further criminal investigations.
For South Africans, the situation is grimly familiar. The country's post-apartheid promise has been steadily hollowed out by the very people entrusted with building functioning institutions. Each new scandal follows the same arc: revelations, inquiries, suspensions, promises of accountability, and then the next scandal.
The army is on the streets because the police cannot be trusted to police. That single fact tells the whole story.

