KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Lieutenant-General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi has doubled down on his claims of criminal infiltration within the police, revealing that he secretly recorded a meeting with controversial tenderpreneur and attempted murder accused Vusimusi “Cat” Matlala.
In a WhatsApp message that has since heightened political and public scrutiny, Mkhwanazi said the recording would be played before Parliament’s ad hoc committee tasked with probing his explosive allegations.
“I recorded the meeting with Matlala, and I will play it to the ad hoc committee,” Mkhwanazi said, underscoring his readiness to substantiate claims that have rattled senior policing and political circles.
The revelation adds a dramatic twist to an already volatile standoff between the outspoken provincial police boss and elements he has accused of undermining law enforcement from within. Mkhwanazi has repeatedly alleged that organised crime figures and politically connected businesspeople have penetrated parts of the criminal justice system, compromising investigations and prosecutions.
Matlala, a businessman whose name has surfaced in several high-profile controversies, is currently facing an attempted murder charge. The nature and context of his meeting with Mkhwanazi remain unclear, but the existence of a recording suggests the commissioner anticipated future disputes over what was said behind closed doors.
Sources close to the matter say the ad hoc committee is expected to focus sharply on the legality, content and implications of the recording, as well as whether it corroborates Mkhwanazi’s broader claims of interference and capture. Legal experts note that while secretly recording a conversation can be contentious, South African law permits one-party consent recordings, potentially strengthening Mkhwanazi’s position.
Political reactions have been swift. Some lawmakers have welcomed the commissioner’s apparent transparency, arguing that hard evidence is essential if allegations of this magnitude are to be taken seriously. Others have cautioned against trial-by-WhatsApp, warning that untested claims could damage public confidence in the police.
For Mkhwanazi, however, the message is clear: he intends to move the debate from accusation to evidence. By placing the recording before Parliament, he appears determined to force a reckoning—either validating his warnings of criminal infiltration or exposing himself to unprecedented accountability.
As the committee prepares to convene, all eyes will be on what the recording reveals—and whether it marks a turning point in one of the most consequential policing controversies in recent years.




















