Afrikaans and English soundbite by Lisa Schickerling MP.
The DA has written to the Acting Minister of Police, Prof Feroz Cachalia, to demand a full explanation of how South Africa’s top law enforcement body, the Hawks, was mobilised to raid the home of South African TikTok content creator, Mr Anton Taylor – reportedly on charges of committing crimes against the state.
Reports have surfaced that Mr Taylor, who posted a satirical video on TikTok in March 2025 taking aim at former Police Minister, Senzo Mchunu, had his home raided by Hawks officers and was subsequently questioned by law enforcement officials. This, after Mr Mchunu apparently laid criminal charges against Mr Taylor on the basis that he considered the TikTok video “extremely, extremely hurting and damaging”.
What the Hawks thought they would find by turning Mr Taylor’s home inside out, when the “offending” video was posted online, is anyone’s guess. Were the allegedly offensive remarks drifting around his living room?
Offended by Mr Taylor’s comments, it appears that Mchunu turned to the Hawks for help. It is also reported that they went so far as to order a triangulation report to establish Mr Taylor’s location and that of his cell phone – an investigation method normally reserved for the most serious crimes.
It is bewildering that the investigation was even allowed to proceed this far, all because Mr Mchunu felt offended (and no doubt embarrassed) by Mr Taylor’s comments. The NPA has reportedly since – after weeks of investigation by the Hawks and hundreds of man hours wasted on what can only be termed a “witch hunt” – declined to prosecute Mr Taylor.
That a former Minister of Police would even contemplate laying charges of this type against a South African citizen, whom he once swore to serve and protect, is a highly disturbing turn of events. Mchunu knows very well that if his feelings were indeed as hurt as he made them out to be, that a civil action for defamation was open to him. Instead, he opted to marshal the full might of the South African Police Service to settle what is nothing more than a personal score.
Let us be clear: Mr Taylor’s video may have been provocative, but it was not criminal, and most definitely not a crime against the state. The Hawks, as a specialised crime-fighting unit, should know better than to allow itself to be weaponised against a citizen exercising his constitutionally guaranteed rights.
Each and every South African is endowed with the inalienable right of free expression; a right integral to the very fabric of our democracy and our constitutional dispensation. And any attack on these fundamental freedoms must be answered.
Satire is not treason. Comedy is not sedition.
The DA will not allow political figures to use the power of the state to shield themselves from criticism.