South Africa arrests two over state corruption probe

Zizi Kodwa. Image: GCIS

South African police said Wednesday they had arrested two people in relation to a huge probe into state corruption under former president Jacob Zuma, amid media reports that a serving minister is among those held.

Thandi Mbambo, a spokeswoman for an elite police unit known as the Hawks, told AFP the two are due to appear before a specialist court south of Johannesburg, on charges of corruption.

Asked whether police could confirm that Sports, Arts and Culture Minister Zizi Kodwa had been arrested, Mbambo replied, “We can confirm that two individuals have been arrested this morning following the Zondo commission recommendations on state capture.”

Kodwa’s ministry did not respond to a request for comment.


The Zondo Commission was a judicial commission of inquiry led by Chief Justice Raymond Zondo tasked with probing corruption under Zuma’s nine-year presidency.

It presented its findings to South Africa’s incumbent leader, President Cyril Ramaphosa, in 2022.

News platform News24 reported that Kodwa was held on accusations of taking 1.6 million rand ($85,000) in bribes in connection with contracts handed out by the city of Johannesburg to upgrade and maintain the metro’s software systems.

It comes at a delicate time for the ruling African National Congress (ANC), of which Kodwa is a senior member.


Its top brass is holding talks to form a coalition government after the party suffered a serious setback in last week’s general elections, slipping below 50 percent of the vote for the first time since the advent of democracy in 1994.

The ANC won 40 percent of preferences — a catastrophic slump from the 57.5 percent it won in 2019 — and lost its outright parliamentary majority.

Kodwa was among the ANC members expected to take up a seat in the National Assembly.

Zuma, who was forced out of office as president and ANC leader in 2018 under a cloud of corruption allegations that led to the Zondo report, won almost 15 percent of the vote last week, fronting the recently formed uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party.

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