The bodies were still warm when the politicians arrived. Twelve dead, a dozen more wounded, all gunned down in a hail of automatic fire in a Johannesburg township late Tuesday night. The attackers fled into the darkness, leaving a trail of shell casings and shattered lives. The South African police, overwhelmed and underfunded, have launched a manhunt. The UK has offered forensic support. But sources on the ground tell me this isn't a one-off. This is the symptom of a system rotting from the inside.
I've spent years tracing the money in this country. What I've found is a web of corruption that bleeds into every corner of law enforcement. The weapons used in this attack? Likely smuggled from state armouries or bought with laundered cash from mining deals gone sour. The suspects? Probably protected by officials who profit from the chaos. The government will call it 'isolated gang violence.' They always do. But look at the pattern: a city where private security outnumbers police three to one, where murder rates have soared 40% in five years, and where the rich build walls while the poor die in alleys.
Let's talk about the UK's offer. Forensic support sounds noble, but it's a bandage on a haemorrhage. The real question is why South Africa's own forensic labs are in shambles. I've seen the reports: backlogs of six months, evidence lost, technicians bribed to lose samples. This isn't incompetence, it's design. When you can't solve crimes, you can't prosecute the powerful. And the powerful in this country have a lot to hide.
The victims were mostly young men, a few women. Their names won't make the front pages tomorrow. They're the collateral damage of a system that prioritises profit over people. The same system that allowed a mining company to dump toxic waste into a river, killing a village. The same system that saw a bank fined a pittance for laundering billions in drug money. The same system that will now use this massacre to demand more surveillance, more police powers, more money for a force that can't even protect its own.
I spoke to a source in the police intelligence unit this morning. Off the record, of course. He told me the suspects are known to them but were released two weeks ago for 'lack of evidence.' Evidence that was destroyed in a fire at a police station last month. A coincidence? In my world, there are no coincidences. There are only threads leading to boardrooms and offshore accounts.
This is not a story about a manhunt. It's a story about a country at war with itself. The UK's forensic teams will arrive, take samples, file a report, and leave. The killers will be caught or killed. But the next massacre is already being planned in a shack in Alexandra or a penthouse in Sandton. The money will continue to flow. The bodies will continue to pile up. And the men in suits will continue to smile for the cameras.
I'll keep following the money. You keep reading. Because the truth is always worse than the headlines.








