Note to Editors: Please see attached soundbite by Ian Cameron MP
The Democratic Alliance (DA) is outraged by the acquittal of the eight SAPS VIP Protection Unit officers—attached to Deputy President Paul Mashatile—after an internal SAPS disciplinary process. These officers were filmed brutally assaulting civilians on the N1 highway.
This disgraceful outcome is the direct result of a failed internal SAPS disciplinary system, obstructive union interference, and complicit police leadership.
This case is not isolated. It reflects a broader rot within SAPS disciplinary processes where violent conduct is excused, internal accountability is cosmetic, and politically connected officers enjoy untouchable status. The footage of the assault left no room for doubt, and yet, SAPS management signed off on a decision that makes a mockery of justice and public trust.
It is increasingly clear that bodyguards assigned to the Deputy President operate as a law unto themselves—emboldened by institutional protection and unchecked by consequence. The acquittal reinforces the perception that these VIP units function with their own rules, shielded from the standards that apply to the rest of society.
Major General Wally Rhoode, head of the Presidential Protection Service, must also be held to account. His controversial conduct during the Phala Phala farm burglary—including the alleged illegal investigation and failure to report the crime—already raised serious questions about his fitness for office. His role in SAPS’s VIP culture of impunity cannot be ignored. Furthermore, his involvement in the bungled and costly security trip to Poland last year exemplifies a chronic lack of accountability in leadership.
The DA demands the following urgent actions:
- A full review and overhaul of SAPS’s internal disciplinary regulations to ensure that violent misconduct results in real and timely consequences—not protective bureaucracy.
- Immediate parliamentary scrutiny of the obstructive role played by police unions in delaying and undermining internal misconduct proceedings.
- Suspension and investigation of Major General Wally Rhoode, pending independent assessment of his leadership and fitness for continued office.
- Criminal prosecution of the N1 perpetrators—as internal acquittal does not preclude the state from pursuing real justice through the courts.
- A parliamentary review of VIP Protection protocols and reporting lines, to prevent a culture of parallel power structures and lawlessness.
- The R112,000 spent on the Chairperson of the disciplinary process—drawn from public funds—should be declared fruitless and wasteful expenditure. This sham process cost taxpayers dearly and delivered only impunity.
The DA will not rest until justice is served and the rule of law is restored—even within the ranks of those tasked to uphold it. We cannot allow SAPS to become a sanctuary for thugs in uniform.