A parliamentary ad hoc committee was informed on Thursday that a sensitive kidnapping investigation was halted following an unprecedented intervention by a senior police official, raising new concerns regarding interference at the highest levels of law enforcement.
General Dumisani Khumalo stated that a specialized team of police officers had been making significant progress in the investigation of the kidnapping of merchant Jerry Boshoga. According to Khumalo, the team had already conducted operational activities, including a search on the residence of Vusi “Cat” Matlala, when the case took a sudden and significant turn.
Khumalo informed the committee that shortly after the incursion, General Shadrack Sibiya intervened and assumed responsibility for the investigation. What ensued, he stated, was profoundly disturbing.
From that point onward, the investigation came to a halt, as Khumalo described Sibiya’s conduct as unprecedented within established professional policing frameworks. He clarified that it was exceedingly unusual for a senior officer to withdraw a case from an active investigative team without explicit operational justification, particularly in a matter as grave as a kidnapping.
The general’s testimony depicted a narrative in which the case lost momentum precisely at the point when investigators were seemingly on the verge of uncovering crucial leads. Khumalo proposed that the abrupt change in leadership interrupted continuity, diminished investigator morale, and ultimately compromised the pursuit of justice.
Committee members inquired of Khumalo whether appropriate procedures had been adhered to and if any written explanations were furnished for the takeover. He stated that no satisfactory explanation was provided and that the manner in which the decision was implemented was inconsistent with established standards of police conduct.
The disclosures, initially broadcast on the KZN Tonight Podcast, have heightened scrutiny of internal procedures within the South African Police Service, especially regarding the management of high-profile or politically sensitive cases. Committee members indicated their intention to request additional testimony from other officers involved, including members of the original investigative team.
As the investigation progresses, Khumalo’s testimony reinforces mounting concerns that internal interference could be undermining the integrity of intricate criminal investigations. For the family of Jerry Boshoga and the general public, the unresolved concerns are clear: why was a progressing case obstructed, and who ultimately gained from an investigation that was silenced?
The committee is anticipated to reconvene to assess whether accountability measures or additional investigations are justified in response to the serious allegations.
