This morning, the Democratic Alliance (DA) attended proceedings in the Randburg Magistrate’s Court, where the eight SAPS Presidential Protection Unit members, caught on video brutally assaulting civilians on the N1 highway, are on trial for assault.
Despite the overwhelming public evidence of this brazen attack, the accused remain on duty in full uniform after being acquitted through an opaque and toothless internal SAPS disciplinary process. This remains one of the most damning indictments of SAPS’s so-called commitment to internal accountability.
The DA is appalled that SAPS failed to even meet the most basic prosecutorial standard in the internal process. The disciplinary outcome flies in the face of a video that not only went viral but was already ruled admissible in this very court in 2024.
This morning’s testimony from a SAPS Sergeant confirmed the absurdity of the accused officers’ claims – that the victims attempted to flee by allegedly breaking their own vehicle windows – despite clear footage showing one of the victims being beaten. The driver was still seated in the car when a window was smashed and he was beaten with a rifle.
It is shameful that the state has allowed a culture of impunity to fester within the ranks of SAPS, especially among elite units responsible for protecting the highest offices in the land. The disciplinary process was not just a failure of procedure, it was a failure of political will.
As part of our urgent reform package to fix South Africa’s broken criminal justice system, the DA has launched a watching brief programme to monitor high-stakes prosecutions and improve outcomes. This case, involving the so-called Blue Light Mafia, is one such matter where the DA has instituted a watching brief to ensure public accountability and oversight throughout the criminal trial process.
The DA will continue to pursue full accountability in this case. We will use every oversight mechanism available to Parliament to demand answers, including:
- How the SAPS disciplinary process failed so comprehensively;
- Why the internal outcome contradicted the admissible and unambiguous video evidence;
- Whether political interference played any role in shielding these officers; and
- What steps are being taken to prevent repeat failures of accountability in SAPS.