Political analyst and outspoken commentator Prince Mashele has delivered one of his sharpest rebukes of the ANC-led government, accusing Police Minister Senzo Mchunu of being “captured by criminal interests” and warning that South Africa has crossed the threshold into becoming a full-blown mafia state.
Speaking during a recent public commentary, Mashele alleged that organised crime has not only infiltrated state institutions, but now directs them from within.
“Police Minister Senzo Mchunu is in the pockets of criminals and has been caught out — our country has been taken by criminals. The ANC has turned South Africa into a mafia state. We are now a mafia state,” Mashele said.
Mashele’s remarks come against the backdrop of escalating violent crime, deepening public distrust in policing structures, and growing concern over alleged criminal syndicates linked to political networks. From construction mafias to illegal mining cartels and protection rackets, analysts warn that the lines between state power and criminal enterprise have blurred alarmingly.
Critics argue that Mchunu’s leadership has so far failed to inspire confidence in the rebuilding of SAPS credibility, especially following years of institutional damage, hollowed capacity and policy paralysis. Mashele maintains that the minister’s posture is not merely weak, but compromised — a far more serious indictment.
He contends that once criminal syndicates are able to compromise the leadership of security institutions, “the state itself becomes a tool of lawlessness rather than a guardian of justice.”
Civil society organisations and anti-corruption watchdogs have echoed concerns about rising collusion between politically connected elites and syndicates operating across state procurement, border control, mining, and policing.
Mashele’s blunt assessment speaks to a growing sentiment among ordinary South Africans who feel unprotected, ungoverned, and abandoned by the state structures meant to safeguard them. The accusation that national leadership is entangled with criminal networks raises questions not only about competence, but legitimacy.
With general elections approaching and trust in government at historic lows, his remarks sharpen the national debate: can the country still be reclaimed through reform, or has the descent into institutional criminality already passed the point of no return?
For now, Mashele’s warning lands as both an indictment and a challenge — a call for political accountability in a nation where criminal power increasingly appears to set the rules of engagement.
