World

Key figure in South Africa police corruption scandal pleads guilty

BBC World · 2026-06-25

AI SUMMARY

• What happened: Vusimusi "Cat" Matlala, a key figure in a South African police corruption scandal, pleaded guilty to corruption, fraud, and money-laundering charges as part of a plea deal that may lead to testimony against high-ranking officials. • Why it matters: Matlala's cooperation could expose significant corruption within the police force, potentially implicating senior officials, including Police Chief Gen Fannie Masemola, and shedding light on the extent of organized crime's infiltration into law enforcement. • What to watch next: The Pretoria magistrate's ruling on Matlala's plea deal is expected next week, which will determine if he will serve eight years in prison and provide testimony at future trials.

Image source, SABCImage caption, The prosecutor said Vusimusi "Cat" Matlala had evidence that could help bring "high-ranking officials" to justiceByPumza Fihlani, Reporting fromJohannesburg and Damian ZanePublished10 minutes agoVusimusi "Cat" Matlala, a central figure in a major ongoing police graft inquiry in South Africa, has pleaded guilty to corruption, fraud and money-laundering charges as part of a deal with state prosecutors.He was accused of bribing top police officials to win a 360m rand ($22m; £16.5m) tender for his health company Medicare24 in 2024.The plea deal, which has not yet been accepted by the magistrate, would result in Matlala giving evidence against "high-ranking officials", state advocate Santhos Manilall said.Police chief Gen Fannie Masemola is one of those facing charges in relation to this case. He has denied the charges.Manilall told the court in the capital, Pretoria, that it had taken almost two months of negotiations to put the deal together.If accepted, it would result in Matlala, 49, serving eight years in prison.The state's lawyer said that the "sacrifice" of a more lenient sentence would be worth it, as "for the first time we have an accused who has... given us detail that we would not have been made aware of".As part of the deal, Matlala is required to give honest and frank testimony at future trials. The magistrate at the Pretoria court is expected to give his ruling on the plea deal next week. Matlala, who is also facing a separate murder charge that he denies, has been named by a witness at the corruption inquiry known as the Madlanga Commission as being part of a drug-trafficking cartel that has managed to penetrate the police.He has not commented on this accusation but, giving evidence at a parallel parliamentary corruption inquiry last year, denied knowing senior police officers and politicians personally.Matlala has yet to appear at the Madlanga Commission.Witnesses at that inquiry, which began last September, have alleged collusion between criminal underworld figures and senior police officials.It was set up after senior police officer Lt-Gen Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi alleged last July that organised crime groups had infiltrated the government.Related BBC stories:'Gifts' from a lover and 'botched' cocaine raids: Police inquiry grips South AfricaPublished30 MayAn alleged drug cartel and a murdered witness: South Africa's police corruption probePublished24 December 2025South Africa's police minister accused of links to criminal gangsPublished7 July 2025Go to BBCAfrica.com, external for more news from the African continent.Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, external, on Facebook at BBC Africa, external or on Instagram at bbcafrica, externalRelated topicsAfricaSouth AfricaBBC Africa podcastsFocus on AfricaThis Is Africa

Source: BBC World
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