Two raids, one warning: corruption has captured both the enforcers and the system they serve

OUTA says the raids on suspended Deputy Police Commissioner Shadrack Sibiya and Tembisa Hospital tender mogul Hangwani Maumela, exposes a state hollowed out by corruption from policing to procurement, and demands urgent reform of South Africa’s justice institutions.

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Image: RSASIU

Two raids, one warning: corruption has captured both the enforcers and the system they serve 

  • The raid on Sibiya’s home is linked to the Madlanga Commission’s probe into criminal infiltration and political interference within SAPS.
  • The SIU’s raids on properties belonging to businessman Hangwani Maumela follow evidence of R2 billion in irregular Tembisa Hospital tenders exposed by whistleblower Babita Deokaran.
  • These two cases, though unrelated, show how corruption operates across systems of power from those who loot to those who are supposed to stop them.
  • Accountability will only matter when investigations lead to convictions and recovered funds, not just headlines.

The Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (OUTA) notes the two major law enforcement operations currently unfolding in South Africa: the raid on suspended Deputy National Police Commissioner Shadrack Sibiya’s home, and the Special Investigating Unit’s asset seizures targeting Tembisa Hospital tender mogul Hangwani Maumela. These developments are stark evidence of how corruption continues to infect the state at every level.

The Sibiya raid forms part of an investigation linked to the Madlanga Commission of Inquiry into Criminality, Political Interference and Corruption in the Criminal Justice System. This commission, established following testimony by KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Lieutenant-General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, is probing allegations that criminal syndicates have infiltrated SAPS, the NPA, intelligence structures, and elements of the judiciary. These claims cut to the heart of South Africa’s law enforcement crisis. When the police themselves are compromised, accountability becomes impossible.

Separately, the SIU’s raids on Maumela’s properties, including his luxury Sandton mansion and a car dealership in Mpumalanga, mark a major step in the investigation into the looting of Tembisa Hospital. The scandal, first exposed by murdered whistleblower Babita Deokaran, revealed how politically connected businesspeople siphoned more than R2 billion through irregular tenders, while the hospital itself struggled with medicine shortages and failing infrastructure. 

“Together, these cases tell a single story,” says OUTA CEO Wayne Duvenage. “The rot is not confined to one department or one corrupt official. It runs from the procurement systems in many government departments and state entities that enrich undeserved companies and politically connected individuals, to the police structures that are supposed to hold them accountable. Until these networks are dismantled and the rule of law is allowed to flow unhindered – leading to prosecutions - South Africa remains trapped in a cycle of exposure without consequence.”


OUTA calls for urgent action to strengthen and capacitate the SIU, NPA, the Hawks and SARS ensuring they have both independence and capacity to pursue complex corruption cases to completion.


Raids and asset seizures are a start. These specific matters currently unfolding are many years overdue and there, are there are thousands more to get to. To do so, South Africans deserves and needs justice that goes beyond confiscations of a few high-profile cases. We need sustainable justice that is effective and restores public trust, protects whistleblowers, and proves that accountability is not selective. 

More information

A voicenote with comment by OUTA CEO Wayne Duvenage is here.
The SIU report on Tembisa Hospital is here.

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Tembisa Hospital: Repurposed for looting
The SIU interim report on their investigations on Tembisa Hospital, reveals a culture of fraud, corruption and racketeering, where looters stole enough public funds to run that hospital for more than a year, but only one person tried to stop them