President Cyril Ramaphosa has escalated the inquiry into suspected corruption and mismanagement at the Umzumbe Local Municipality through a recent proclamation that enhances the capacity of the Special Investigating Unit (SIU).
This development indicates that the inquiry remains active. By expanding the timeline under examination, the SIU will now be equipped to investigate further issues that may have arisen during its ongoing scrutiny of various municipal infrastructure initiatives in KwaZulu-Natal.
The updated proclamation, published as Proclamation Notice 327 of 2026 in the Government Gazette on July 10, 2026, modifies the earlier Proclamation 183 of 2024, which initially empowered the SIU to look into claims of graft, procurement anomalies, unauthorized spending of public funds, and significant mismanagement at the municipality.
The original announcement, made on September 13, 2024, related to projects commencing from January 1, 2013. Investigators were tasked with assessing whether public funds were misapplied during the planning, procurement, and execution phases of several key infrastructure undertakings.
Highlighted projects under examination include the establishment of new municipal offices, road refurbishment programs, the Isipofu Access Road, the Ntelezi Msani Heritage Centre, the Nkanini Indoor Sports Centre, the Ntatshana Access Road and Bridge, in addition to a Three Year Electrification Turnkey Project.
The modified proclamation introduces two important updates.
Firstly, it rectifies the tender number associated with the Nkanini Indoor Sports Centre after the initial proclamation cited an erroneous number. The amendment notes that the tender number changed during the awarding process, necessitating this correction to accurately capture the procurement details.
Secondly, the proclamation extends the inquiry period to the date of its announcement. This empowers the SIU to investigate any new evidence or claims that have come to light since the first proclamation.
This extension is anticipated to bolster the investigation by allowing investigators to pursue new leads pertaining to the municipality’s original investigation parameters, free from the limitations of the previous deadline.
The SIU is governed by the Special Investigating Units and Special Tribunals Act, 1996 (Act No. 74 of 1996). This law grants the unit the authority to probe corruption, fraud, and maladministration related to state bodies and to initiate civil proceedings aimed at recouping public money lost due to illicit actions.
If evidence of misconduct emerges, the SIU may initiate civil actions in either the Special Tribunal or the High Court to recover financial losses incurred by the state. The unit also has the capacity to nullify unlawful contracts and take action against individuals found guilty of corrupt or mismanagement practices.
The revised proclamation does not present new allegations against the municipality. Instead, it provides the SIU with the necessary legal framework to continue its investigation comprehensively, correct an administrative mistake related to a tender reference, and pursue any additional evidence discovered during its inquiry.
With a significant amount of funds lost to corruption annually within South Africa’s public sector, such investigations are crucial in evaluating government efforts to enhance accountability and protect public resources. As the SIU’s investigation progresses, the focus will be on whether the broadened scope leads to new findings, civil recoveries, or legal actions.
