A landmark internal affairs investigation into the South African Police Service (SAPS) has concluded with 47 officers facing criminal charges, in a report that openly accuses the state of systemic negligence. The inquiry, led by a unit of British-trained commanders embedded within SAPS since 2019, uncovered evidence of corruption, evidence tampering, and collusion with organised crime reaching senior ranks.
The findings, released in Pretoria on Wednesday, represent the most damning official assessment of South African policing since the end of apartheid. The report states that ‘institutional rot’ has allowed criminal networks to operate with near impunity, facilitated by officers who ‘abandoned their oath in exchange for patronage’.
Commissioner Bheki Cele, who has overseen the force since 2018, deflected questions about his own responsibility, instead praising the ‘courageous work’ of the Integrity Unit. That unit, drawn from a cohort of 300 officers trained at the UK’s Bramshill Police College under a bilateral agreement, has been operating independently of normal SAPS command structures.
The British High Commission in Pretoria acknowledged the programme, stating it is ‘part of a longstanding partnership to strengthen institutional integrity’. Whitehall sources confirm that UK-funded training now reaches every provincial police command, with a focus on financial forensics and anti-corruption procedure.
Critics argue that the inquiry’s findings are a direct indictment of the African National Congress’s three decades in power. The opposition Democratic Alliance called for a commission of inquiry into political interference, while civil society groups noted that similar accusations were levelled five years ago and produced no prosecutions.
The report identifies 12 ‘high-value targets’ among those implicated, including three provincial commissioners and a former head of the elite Hawks unit. Charges range from racketeering to murder conspiracy. All 47 officers have been suspended pending trial.
South Africa’s police union, Popcru, condemned the inquiry as a ‘witch hunt’ and warned that morale within the rank and file is at an all-time low. But the Integrity Unit’s commander, a former Scotland Yard detective now serving as SAPS brigadier, told local media: ‘This is not about targeting individuals. It is about restoring the contract between the police and the public.’
The case resonates beyond South Africa’s borders. It tests the effectiveness of Western-funded institutional reform in post-colonial states, a project that has frequently floundered in places like Afghanistan and Iraq. Here, the British approach has been deliberately low-profile, avoiding the large-scale missions that invite accusations of neo-colonialism.
President Cyril Ramaphosa, whose own record on corruption has been questioned, has not commented directly on the report. His office said he would address the nation within 48 hours.
For now, the Integrity Unit’s work continues. Its investigators are now examining cold cases of police brutality and disappearances from the 1980s, signalling that the inquiry’s scope may widen further. The question is whether the South African state has the political will to follow through, or whether this will become another chapter in a long history of unfulfilled reforms.








