Note to Editors: Please see attached soundbite by Ian Cameron MP
The escape of alleged illegal mining kingpin, James Neo Tshoaledi, underscores why South Africa urgently needs an Anti-Extortion Plan combined with a robust, intelligence-driven approach to crime.
It is believed that the suspect was assisted in escaping last week, despite the South African Police Service’s (SAPS) ‘Vala Umgodi’ Operation. This brazen escape illustrates the pervasive influence of criminal syndicates and highlights how they operate with impunity, often aided by corruption and compromised officials.
The DA has called for a Commission of Inquiry into the full events surrounding the Buffelsfontein mine saga. Yet, the links between illegal mining, extortion, and organised crime are undeniable. These syndicates not only exploit vulnerable communities, but in many cases, they take entire communities hostage, as seen in areas like Stilfontein. Residents, informal traders, and local businesses are forced to pay protection fees under threat of violence, creating a parallel economy built on fear and lawlessness.
Illegal mining syndicates use their power to extort not only those directly involved in mining operations but also the surrounding communities, crippling their livelihoods and safety. This extortion network is the lifeblood of their criminal enterprises, funding everything from weapons to bribery schemes and shielding their operations through systemic corruption.
Extortion is at the heart of South Africa’s illegal mining economy.
The DA’s Anti-Extortion Plan, launched in 2024, provides a comprehensive framework to combat these syndicates and dismantle the broader extortion economy. Proper crime intelligence is the cornerstone of this strategy, as it will expose the real power players—senior officials, compromised police officers, and the kingpins driving these operations—and enable effective intervention.
The DA once again calls on the Minister of Police, Senzo Mchunu, to immediately implement these concrete steps:
- Establish a centralised intelligence gathering and analysis hub: Syndicates thrive in secrecy, and fragmented intelligence systems allow them to operate unchecked. A unified intelligence hub will enable SAPS to track extortion networks, anticipate threats, and dismantle criminal operations from the top down.
- Enhance community reporting mechanisms: Communities like Stilfontein are on the front lines of extortion. They live in fear of retaliation for speaking out. Strengthening anonymous reporting channels and providing whistle-blower protection will empower these communities to assist law enforcement.
- Target the kingpins, not just the foot soldiers: Low-level ‘zama-zamas’ are often scapegoated in SAPS operations, while the real organisers and financiers escape justice. Proper intelligence must expose and hold accountable the criminal masterminds, including any senior officials enabling these operations.
- Strengthen our criminal justice system: Extortion networks cannot be dismantled without greater collaboration between SAPS, the National Prosecuting Authority, Crime Intelligence, and other bodies. To restore public confidence, corruption within these institutions must be rooted out, and cases must be prosecuted decisively to ensure justice is served.
Communities like Stilfontein cannot continue to live as hostages of criminal syndicates. Illegal mining is not just an economic or safety issue—it is part of a broader extortion crisis that affects every facet of South African life. The DA’s Anti-Extortion Plan, bolstered by proper crime intelligence, will not only dismantle these networks but also restore hope to communities living under siege.
Failure to act decisively will embolden these syndicates further, allowing their extortionist grip on our nation to tighten.
South Africans deserve better. It is time for the government to act to protect our communities, our economy, and the very fabric of our democracy.