Months of uncertainty surrounding the controversial Bodulo Mothong housing project could come to an end today when the Free State High Court delivers judgment in a closely watched legal battle that could determine the future of hundreds of vulnerable families awaiting relocation to safer living cond...
This morning, the University of the Free State, together with student leadership, have agreed that provisional registration will be phased out over a period of two years.
This comes after a weeklong protest conducted by the students to show their dissatisfaction over the decision by the institution to phase out provisional registration.
The violent protests led to extensive damage to university property, where students engaged in acts of vandalism and arson, and left several security officers with injuries and three hospitalised on the Qwaqwa campus.
The university campus has been closed for five days now, and according to spokesperson Lacea Loader, the UFS is the only university in South Africa that permits students to register even when they have outstanding fees.
"This practice reflected the university’s commitment to access to education; however, there are serious concerns about the rising levels of student debt and the growing accumulation, leaving students with unmanageable debt at graduation.
“Along with other factors, the debt levels have reached nearly a billion rand over the past five years,” she said.
But for a student like Noluthando Masha, a student from the UFS, who relies on National Student Financial Aid(NSFAS), this arrangement is a serious concern.
“The first thing that came to my mind is 'how are we going to further our studies as NSFAS dependents, where are we going to get that amount of money by January, because we come from low-class families.
But this reconsideration gives us hope that maybe by the end of these two years, there will be a solution that will not affect students as this one would have,” she said.
But there are students who still think the two-year period is short and want a permanent solution that will not compromise students’ future.
“My perception, based on this agreement, is that our SRC didn't represent the black students well enough. Because, after that period of two years, UFS management will get rid of the system that allows provisional registrations, then students will strike again? We need an SRC that has a unipolar mandate that advocates for the struggle of black students within every university in the country,” said a student known as Moleboheng Mokoena.
Eskom has ramped up its national smart meter rollout, kicking off installations in KwaZulu-Natal last week Monday. The power utility said the project is part of a broader plan to modernise the national grid and improve the way customers experience electricity supply.
The goal is ambitious but Eskom vowed to help put an end to load reduction challenges within the next 12 to 18 months. Over the next three years, Eskom aims to install 7.2 million smart meters across South Africa. The current phase of the rollout is expected to benefit about 800,000 customers.
Capabilities and Benefits
Smart meters are becoming a central part of Eskom’s plan to address its financial and operational challenges, including growing debt and widespread electricity theft.
According to the power utility, the new technology will allow it to remotely disconnect users who don’t pay, helping to protect paying customers from the consequences of non-payment.
The meters are also meant to tighten control over the grid. They make it easier to detect tampering and illegal electricity sales, and give Eskom more accurate data to plan ahead and respond to issues more quickly. Because the technology removes the need for manual readings, it can also lower operational costs.
Another aim of the rollout is to expand access to Free Basic Electricity (FBE) for qualifying households. Currently, only 485,000 of Eskom’s 2.1 million eligible customers receive this benefit. Smart meters would allow the government to “front-load” the 50 kWh monthly allocation, potentially reaching more households.
For users, the meters provide real-time information about consumption and remove the reliance on estimated bills. This could make it easier for households to budget and monitor their usage. The system also supports Time-of-Use pricing, which charges different rates depending on the time of day, allowing people to shift some usage to cheaper off-peak hours if they choose.
Eskom has asked customers to ensure its teams can safely access meter boxes during installation. It is worth noting that the rollout is not optional and older meters will eventually be replaced and taken out of use.
The utility has also introduced an incentive scheme linked to the new technology. Households with fully activated smart meters and no outstanding payments can receive R90 a month if they agree to let Eskom remotely limit their electricity supply during peak demand periods. Participants will receive an SMS alert an hour before a “load limiting” event and are encouraged to switch off high-usage appliances like geysers and stoves to avoid disconnection.
These events can take place up to 10 times a month and last for no more than two hours. Customers who comply receive the R90 either as a prepaid token or as a credit on their post-paid account.
How much will it cost?
The smart meter rollout comes at a time when Eskom is under severe financial pressure.
Municipalities collectively owe the utility more than R100 billion, while customers owe municipalities more than R400 billion.
Eskom’s chief financial officer, Caleb Cassim, recently cautioned that municipal debt to the utility could surpass R300 billion within the next five years if the situation doesn’t improve.
Electricity theft remains a major contributor to these financial problems. In the 2024/25 financial year alone, Eskom recorded R7.1 billion in losses due to theft and other non-technical energy losses.
The rollout of smart meters is also part of a broader government strategy to address municipal financial instability. The National Treasury is implementing a $113 million (around R2 billion) programme over three years to support municipalities in tightening revenue collection and improving accountability.
Last year, 67,000 smart meters were installed across 18 municipalities. According to Treasury, areas such as Sol Plaatjie and Bela Bela saw better payment rates to Eskom after the rollout. These municipalities were then able to benefit from a one-third debt write-off as part of an incentive for improved financial performance.
Concerns and criticism
Despite the potential benefits, the rollout has met with sharp criticism and operational challenges.
Concerns have been raised over Eskom's control over consumer usage and the remote control devices. Questions have also been raised over fraud and operational issues.
In Johannesburg, the electricity utility City Power temporarily suspended all prepaid meter conversions from August 27 to November 1, 2025, pending a thorough review. Concerns raised included customers who became non-vending” (no longer purchasing electricity) after conversion, and discrepancies in accounts not accurately reflecting on City Power’s systems.
The power utility has urged customers to be vigilant, cautioning them to only allow identifiable, confirmed contractors into their homes to install the new smart meters, and advising them to check that their area is currently scheduled for the rollout. Customers whose meters are replaced will have any remaining credit either refunded or transferred into the new meter.
The location of Walmart’s inaugural branded store in South Africa has been confirmed: it will open at Fourways Mall in Gauteng, occupying the space formerly held by Game.
The announcement follows Walmart’s commitment in September 2025 to launch its first own-brand stores in the country before the year end. Walmart already has a substantial footprint in South Africa through its ownership of Massmart, which operates the Makro, Game and Builders Warehouse chains.
The Fourways Mall store represents its first retail operation under the Walmart banner, rather than via its existing brands.
According to official communications, the new stores are expected to offer an extensive range of merchandise including fresh groceries, household essentials, apparel and technology.
Locally sourced products will also form part of the offering. The stores will be designed with bright, wide-aisled layouts and enhanced digital capabilities to improve the shopping experience.
Massmart had previously stated that while Walmart will be added as a trading banner, it will not replace Makro, Game or Builders Warehouse.
Walmart’s rollout will include both new sites and, where suitable, the conversion of existing retail space in the firm’s real estate portfolio.
Observers noted that at Fourways Mall, the former Game outlet has been closed for several months.
Massmart’s social media channels and local media teased the appearance of Walmart signage: the “Walmart Spark” logo was installed on the site on October 6, 2025, and a photo of the newly branded storefront was published on October 14.
A Fourways Mall employee confirmed that the store is located at the old Game site, though it was not yet open for trade.
Fourways Mall is South Africa’s largest mall by retail space since 2019, but it has faced challenges: high vacancy rates, increased competition, and concerns over tenant retention.
However, it is undergoing a revitalisation. A R400 million investment is underway to improve infrastructure, reduce vacancies, and bring in new tenants.
Public trust in South Africa’s institutions has plunged to its lowest levels in more than two decades, with the South African Police Service (SAPS) emerging as one of the worst-performing arms of government.
According to the Human Sciences Research Council, only 22% of South Africans say they trust the police — the lowest figure since 1998. Experts warn that this credibility crisis is not merely institutional but has devastating social consequences.
Renowned criminologist Professor Kholofelo Rakubu, Head of Department at Tshwane University of Technology’s merged Department of Law, Safety and Security Management, told IOL that corruption and dysfunction within the police have become so entrenched that citizens now see them as “part of everyday life.”
“For many South Africans, the collapse of police credibility has become disturbingly routine,” Rakubu said. “It is no longer shocking when an officer is arrested for corruption or when a suspect walks free because of a missing docket. It has become part of how people expect the system to function — and that is extremely dangerous.”
Broken Trust, Rising Insecurity
Rakubu said the effects of a compromised police service ripple through every layer of society.
“Crimes go unreported because people do not believe anything will come of it,” she said. “Witnesses are afraid to testify because they have seen others threatened or even killed. When communities stop believing in justice, the rule of law begins to collapse.”
She added that poorer areas suffer the worst consequences.
“In wealthier suburbs, residents can hire private security. But in townships and rural areas, people have nowhere to turn. The state’s withdrawal creates a vacuum, and that vacuum is filled by criminal networks, extortion groups, or vigilante structures. Those become the real centres of power.”
The breakdown in trust, Rakubu warned, is eroding social cohesion itself.
“When justice fails, neighbours stop trusting one another. Community-policing forums collapse because people feel they are wasting their time. Young people grow up thinking that corruption is simply how South Africa works — and that is how apathy and rebellion take root.”
Madlanga Commission and Ad Hoc Committee: Deep-Rooted Rot
The Madlanga Commission laid bare the depth of SAPS corruption, exposing systemic bribery, political interference, and leaked intelligence operations. Testimony before the inquiry implicated suspended Police Minister Senzo Mchunu, with claims that classified information was sold for cash.
The subsequent parliamentary Ad Hoc Committee reinforced those findings, pointing to factionalism within SAPS, misuse of surveillance equipment, and obstruction of internal investigations, including allegations raised by Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi.
Despite the damning revelations, progress on implementing the recommendations has been painfully slow.
“We have seen this movie before,” Rakubu remarked. “Commissions come and go, they expose the rot, but nothing changes. South Africans are tired of hearing about accountability that never arrives. It’s business as usual, and that’s exactly what corrupt networks rely on.”
A Nation Numbed
Analysts say the muted public response reflects corruption fatigue — a collective exhaustion after years of scandals and stalled inquiries.
“People are not indifferent; they are emotionally depleted,” Rakubu explained. “Every few months there is another inquiry, another promise, another scandal. Citizens feel powerless. That emotional burnout is what allows corruption to persist — because outrage has turned into resignation.”
The National Anti-Corruption Advisory Council’s 2025 report paints a bleak picture: corruption now spans healthcare, law enforcement, and procurement — even extending to sextortion and youth disillusionment.
While President Cyril Ramaphosa’s anti-corruption strategies, including the Investigating Directorate Against Corruption, have shown intent, experts say these initiatives are under-resourced and inconsistently implemented.
“We cannot fight corruption with good speeches and weak institutions,” Rakubu cautioned. “Until the people responsible are prosecuted — not reassigned, not suspended, but prosecuted — South Africans will continue to believe that integrity is optional.”
‘Normalising Dysfunction’
The growing sense of resignation, Rakubu warned, poses a deeper threat than corruption itself.
“When citizens start accepting dysfunction as normal, democracy begins to die quietly,” she said. “The tragedy is not only that corruption exists, but that it is no longer shocking. Once corruption stops provoking outrage, it becomes culture — and that is when recovery becomes almost impossible.”
Until the recommendations of the Madlanga Commission and the Ad Hoc Committee are fully implemented — and those implicated held accountable — South Africa’s policing crisis will continue to corrode both public safety and national morale.
On Tuesday, IOL reported that South Africans are watching yet another wave of corruption revelations — from Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi’s explosive claims about criminal infiltration in the police, to testimony before Parliament’s ad hoc committee and the Madlanga Commission — with weary eyes.
Across townships, suburbs and rural communities, the reaction is the same: not shock, but exhaustion and fatigue. For many, these scandals have become a grim ritual in a democracy that promised integrity but has delivered repetition.
“We are fatigued by repetition”
Siyabulela Jentile, president of #NotInMyName
What the country is witnessing, according to Jentile, “isn’t new — it’s the continuation of a long, painful story of institutional betrayal.”
“South Africans are not numb by choice; we are fatigued by repetition. Each revelation of corruption lands on ground already scorched by previous scandals — from state capture to failures in local governance. When accountability becomes the exception rather than the norm, outrage slowly turns into resignation.”
Public trust in the South African Police Service (SAPS), he said, has been profoundly eroded.
“People no longer see the police as protectors but as an extension of a state that has lost moral authority. In townships and rural areas, residents feel safer calling community patrols or neighbourhood-watch groups than reporting crimes to SAPS.”
The consequences, Jentile warned, are devastating.
“A compromised police service doesn’t just fail to solve crimes; it incubates criminality. It gives organised syndicates, drug networks, and corrupt officers room to operate with impunity. It means gender-based violence cases go uninvestigated, children disappear without trace, and communities resort to vigilantism.”
For Jentile, corruption has “festered into our national fabric.”
“We joke about it, anticipate it, even budget for it. That’s the danger: when wrongdoing becomes predictable, accountability becomes optional. But the fact that people are no longer shocked is not a sign of acceptance — it’s a symptom of exhaustion. Civil society must help rebuild that moral outrage and turn it into organised demand for reform.”
President Cyril Ramaphosa has suspended Inspector-General of Intelligence, Imtiaz Fazel, with immediate effect, pending the outcome of a formal investigation by Parliament’s Joint Standing Committee on Intelligence (JSCI).
The presidency confirmed this in an official statement on Wednesday night.
According to the statement, the JSCI recently notified Ramaphosa that it had received a complaint regarding Fazel’s conduct and would launch an inquiry under Section 7(4) of the Intelligence Services Act (Act 40 of 1994).
In line with Section 7(5) of the Act, the President holds the authority to suspend the inspector-general during the course of such an investigation.
Fazel, who was appointed as South Africa’s Inspector-General of Intelligence in November 2022, was responsible for overseeing the activities of the country’s intelligence services, ensuring they operate within the legal and constitutional framework.
His suspension marks a significant development in South Africa’s intelligence oversight landscape and raises critical questions about internal accountability.
This is because Ramaphosa established a commission of inquiry into the corruption of the police force, judiciary and the intelligence agencies.
This is after KZN Police Commissioner, Lt-Gen. Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi alleged that there was serious corruption in the SAPS and also other arms of government.
“The Inspector-General may be suspended by the President pending a decision in such investigation,” the Act states, underscoring the seriousness of the allegations now under review.
While details of the complaint remain confidential, the move signals the government’s commitment to transparency and legislative oversight within the intelligence community.
Fazel’s suspension is expected to draw sharp scrutiny from political and civil society circles, especially given his watchdog role in a sector historically marred by secrecy and controversy.
The JSCI investigation will determine the next steps, including whether Fazel will be reinstated or face further action.
The Presidency has not indicated who will serve as acting inspector-general during the suspension period.
Meanwhile, Police Minister, Senzo Mchunu, is expected to appear before the Parliament’s ad hoc committee investigating the corruption.