A confidential plea by senior South African police officials has laid bare the rot within a unit once hailed as a beacon of anti-corruption. Sources confirm that the Hawks, the country’s elite crime-fighting directorate, are now at the centre of a bribery scandal that threatens to undermine decades of British-led efforts to impose global anti-graft standards.
Leaked documents obtained by this newsroom reveal that two high-ranking Hawks officers approached a British diplomat in Pretoria last month, seeking advice on how to handle internal misconduct allegations involving a R50 million ($2.7 million) contract for surveillance equipment. The officers admitted that at least six colleagues had accepted bribes from a private company in exchange for manipulating tender processes.
The plea is a stark admission that South Africa’s anti-corruption machinery is itself corrupt. The Hawks were established in 2009 with British assistance, part of a wider push by the UK’s Foreign Office and Serious Fraud Office to export best practices to Commonwealth nations. The idea was simple: teach local investigators how to follow the money, and the bodies would follow. But the bodies have now turned up inside the unit itself.
“We have a situation where the people who are supposed to be chasing crooks are crooks themselves,” said a former Hawks investigator who spoke on condition of anonymity. “The British gave us the training, the manuals, the overseas trips. But you can’t train integrity into someone who has none.”
The scandal has profound implications for the UK’s global anti-graft strategy. For years, London has positioned itself as a champion of transparency, using aid money and diplomatic clout to push laws and enforcement mechanisms in countries from Kenya to Bangladesh. South Africa was supposed to be a success story. Instead, it has become a warning.
Documents show that the bribery scheme involved a company called SecureZone Technologies, which won the surveillance contract despite being one of three bidders and charging 40% more than its nearest competitor. The contract was awarded in 2022, just as the Hawks were supposed to be cracking down on procurement fraud in state-owned enterprises.
“This is a pattern,” said a source inside the UK’s National Crime Agency, which has worked closely with the Hawks. “Wherever we invest in building institutional capacity, we see the same outcome. The institutions get captured by the very people they were meant to police. It’s not just South Africa. It’s Nigeria, Ghana, Pakistan. The money gets lost in the walls.”
The response from London has been muted. The Foreign Office declined to comment, citing ongoing diplomatic discussions. But sources say the UK is quietly reviewing its anti-corruption programmes, aware that the failure in South Africa could embolden critics who argue that British-led efforts are a form of neo-colonial meddling.
In Cape Town, the Hawks spokesperson told reporters that an internal investigation is underway. “We take any allegation of misconduct seriously,” the spokesperson said. “The Hawks remain committed to fighting crime and corruption in South Africa.” But the leaked plea suggests otherwise: that the unit’s leadership is more concerned with damage control than with cleaning house.
The crisis comes at a critical time. South Africa’s economy is teetering, with unemployment at 32% and state-owned enterprises haemorrhaging cash. The latest arrest figures show that corruption convictions have actually fallen by 15% in the past year, despite a surge in reported crimes. The Hawks are supposed to be the spearhead, but the spear is blunt.
“The British need to understand that their model doesn’t work in a country where the state is itself criminalised,” said a professor of criminology at the University of Johannesburg. “You can’t export rule-of-law norms if the law is for sale. The money just gets redirected.”
For now, the British diplomat who received the Hawks’ plea has been recalled to London for consultations. The Surveillance contract remains in force. And the bodies, as they say, keep piling up.








