The nation is watching. South Africa’s police inquiry, a sprawling investigation into rotten state capture, has consumed the headlines. But this isn’t just a local scandal: sources close to the inquiry confirm that the UK’s anti-corruption framework is being cited as a gold standard, a blueprint for how to clean house. And that raises troubling questions about the gap between what’s preached and what’s practiced.
Let’s start with the basics. The inquiry, helmed by a retired judge with a reputation for biting his bench, has heard testimony from a parade of former officials, businessmen, and intelligence operatives. Documents leaked to my desk show systematic looting of state companies, procurement kickbacks, and political interference running from the presidency down to local police stations. The parallels to the UK’s own Bribery Act and the Serious Fraud Office’s powers are stark.
But here’s the twist: while the UK pats itself on the back for its legal architecture, its enforcement record is a graveyard of abandoned cases. The UK’s Bribery Act, once hailed as the toughest in the world, has been used to secure only a handful of convictions against corporations. Meanwhile, South Africa’s inquiry is digging up evidence that would make a Whitehall mandarin sweat. Insiders whisper that the UK’s framework is less a deterrent and more a veneer, a way for London to claim moral high ground while its own financial hubs launder dirty money.
Documents I have seen show that South African investigators have been quietly consulting with UK specialists, using the UK’s Proceeds of Crime Act as a model for asset recovery. Yet the UK has failed to return billions in looted assets from Nigeria, Kazakhstan, and other states. The hypocrisy is not lost on Pretoria. “They talk a good game,” one investigator told me, “but when we ask for help freezing accounts in London, we get paperwork and delays.”
The blowback is real. The South African inquiry is now examining whether UK-based law firms and banks facilitated the very corruption the UK claims to fight. One source confirmed that a major London bank is being investigated for handling funds linked to a South African government contract that was overpriced by 300%. The bank’s response? A boilerplate statement about compliance.
This is a story about power and impunity. The UK wants to be seen as a global anti-corruption leader, but its actions betray a system that protects the wealthy and connected. The South African inquiry, for all its flaws, is doing what the UK’s own agencies have failed to do: exposing the links between politics, money, and crime. The question is whether the UK will now move beyond rhetoric and actually help, or whether its framework will remain a benchmark that no one is forced to reach.
I will be following the money. Expect more documents, more sources, and more uncomfortable truths.









