- DA demands answers from aviation authorities
- SAA safety incidents under scrutiny
- Oversight failures threaten public confidence
The Democratic Alliance (DA) will call for an urgent hearing before Parliament’s Portfolio Committee on Transport following growing concerns over aviation safety failures involving South African Airways (SAA), the South African Civil Aviation Authority (SACAA), Air Traffic and Navigation Services (ATNS), and the Department of Transport.
Recent reports that SAA allegedly took eight days to report the Cape Town fuel emergency incidents to SACAA, well beyond the mandatory 72-hour reporting requirement, are deeply concerning and reinforce a broader pattern of delayed reporting, weak oversight, and regulatory failure within South Africa’s aviation sector.
The DA believes the issue extends far beyond a single incident or airline. What is increasingly emerging is a systemic breakdown involving operational failures, inadequate oversight, and serious concerns regarding the independence of aviation regulation in South Africa.
Over recent years, multiple incidents involving SAA have raised concerns about recurring operational failures and regulatory accountability. These include the February 2021 Alpha Floor near-stall incident at OR Tambo, the 2022 fuel contamination incident involving an SAA flight from Accra to Johannesburg, an unsecured aircraft ramp incident, violations involving international airspace procedures, the October 2024 turbulence incident that injured cabin crew members, allegations involving pilot licence fraud, and the recent Cape Town fuel emergency and Alpha Floor incidents involving flights SA313 and SA327.
The concern is not simply the number of incidents, but the pattern underlying them. Repeated failures, reporting delays, and questions around transparency point to deeper structural problems within aviation oversight and accountability.
We are particularly concerned by the apparent conflict of interest created by SACAA investigating entities such as SAA operating under the same departmental authority. Public confidence in aviation safety depends on independent, transparent, and credible oversight.
The DA will therefore request that the Portfolio Committee on Transport summon SAA, SACAA, ATNS, and the Department of Transport to account for:
- the eight-day delay in reporting the Cape Town incidents and what it reveals about SAA’s safety management culture;
- SACAA’s failure to independently and transparently investigate entities under the same departmental authority; and
- ATNS’s ongoing systemic failures in airspace and navigation management, including the 326 suspended instrument flight procedures.
These concerns are compounded by the fact that SAA has received more than R40 billion in government bailouts between 2018 and 2023, while serious questions remain regarding operational accountability, governance, and passenger safety.
South Africans cannot be expected to continuously fund an airline while confidence in aviation oversight continues to erode.




