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AGU 11 cleared to continue work in Manenberg

agu 11
Image: South African Police Service Anti Gang Unit

 

 

The members of the SAPS Anti-Gang Unit in Cape Town, accused of murder and other crimes, may soon return to work in Manenberg.  

 

This is after the Western Cape High Court on Monday agreed to relax the bail condition preventing the 11 members from entering the area.  

 

They were granted bail on 30 January, after previously being denied bail. 

 

The mentioned bail condition specifically noted that the accused could not enter Manenberg in their personal and/or official capacities until the court case had concluded. 

 

The management of the Western Cape SAPS approached the court last week, arguing that the officers were needed in the fight against gang activity.  

 

READ MORE:  SAPS argue for AGU 11 to return to work in Manenberg – Smile 90.4FM

 

According to court documents from 9 February, that bail condition was “discharged only in respect of the order/condition that the appellants may not enter Manenberg in their official capacities”.   

 

Meanwhile, the remaining bail conditions, including that the accused may not enter Manenberg for any personal reasons, will remain in place.  

 

The other bail conditions include that they may not directly or indirectly interfere with or interact with the witnesses in the case.  

 

The group faces charges in connection with the death of an alleged gangster, Wade Price, in December. 

 

The matter returns to court on 5 March.  

ICYMI: Proposed cannabis rules for private use would allow 750 g possession per day

cannabis

 

The Department of Justice and Constitutional Development has invited members of the public to comment on draft regulations that will shape the implementation of the Cannabis for Private Purposes Act in South Africa.

 

The proposed rules, published in a recent Government Notice, set out detailed limits and conditions for the possession, cultivation, and transportation of cannabis for private use, as well as procedures for clearing certain past cannabis-related criminal records.

 

📌 What the draft regulations propose

 

Among the key provisions:

 

Possession limits

  • Adults would be allowed to possess up to 750 grams of cannabis per day for private use — both in private spaces and in public places.

Home cultivation

  • An adult could cultivate a maximum of five cannabis plants at a private residence, regardless of the plant’s size or strain.

Transporting cannabis

  • The total amount transported may not exceed 750 grams
  • Cannabis must be concealed from public view, such as in a boot, trunk, or closed storage compartment
  • Drivers must inform passengers if cannabis is in the vehicle, and passengers must do the same if they are carrying cannabis
  • Cannabis may not be mixed with other substances while being transported
  • Passengers would also be required to keep cannabis stored in luggage or out of reach of others in the vehicle.

 

🧾 Clearing old cannabis convictions

 

A major part of the draft regulations deals with the expungement of criminal records for certain past cannabis-related offences.

 

The regulations outline:

 

  • How individuals can apply for expungement
  • The forms required
  • The role of the Department of Justice and the SAPS Criminal Record Centre
  • Timeframes for processing applications and issuing certificates
  • People whose previous cannabis convictions were not automatically cleared may apply to have their records expunged, provided they meet the criteria under the Act.

 

🗣 Public participation now open

 

The Department is encouraging individuals, civil society groups, legal experts, and other stakeholders to submit written comments on the draft regulations.

 

Deadline for submissions: Thursday, 5 March 2026

 

Comments must be marked for the attention of Mr M Mokulubete and can be submitted by post, hand delivery, or email.

 

The full draft regulations are available on the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development website.

 

This consultation process is seen as a key step in finalising the practical rules that will govern private cannabis use in South Africa, following the legal reforms introduced by the Cannabis for Private Purposes Act.

City Sets the Record Straight on ‘Airbnb Tax’

airbnb

 

The City has clarified recent media reports that claimed it plans to double the municipal rates on properties that are rented out for short durations, including those listed on Airbnb and Booking.com.

 

The City has denied that this is a new tax, but that all short-term letting premises are already required to pay commercial property rates under the City’s existing Rates Policy.

 

To improve compliance, a draft Short-Term Letting By-Law will go out for public participation soon.

 

This does not apply to primary residences that do some short-term letting, or to long-term letting – residential rates still apply.

 

The City says the aim is fairness: commercial short-term letting operations must pay commercial rates under the City’s existing Rates Policy.

 

According to the Metro, the proposed by-law will make it harder to game the system by only paying residential rates while operating a commercial short-term letting enterprise.

 

Over time, the City has been working to systematically identify non-compliant properties where residential rates are incorrectly being paid.

 

Further details, including the full draft by-law and public participation schedule, will be made available after all due Council processes.

 

In the interim, the City has encouraged short-term letters not to wait until new measures are introduced to promote compliance, but to approach the City now to ensure the correct commercial rates category is paid on residences primarily used for short-term letting.

 

Cape Town has become one of the most expensive property markets in Africa, and a growing number of homes are no longer being rented to residents.

 

Instead, many properties are being used as short-term holiday accommodation on platforms like Airbnb and Booking.com. There are currently an estimated 25,000 to 26,000 short-term rental listings across the city, representing tens of thousands of homes that are not available to people looking for long-term leases.

 

Some experts say this is having a direct impact on the rental market. With fewer properties available for long-term tenants, rental prices rise.

 

At the same time, local renters are increasingly competing with tourists and digital nomads who earn in stronger foreign currencies such as dollars, euros and pounds. For many landlords, short-term rentals can generate significantly more income per night than a traditional monthly lease.

 

 

Cape Town calls for more Metro Policing powers to fight gangs

metro police stoned in Athlone
This image is used for illustrative purposes only

 

Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis has renewed his calls on President Cyril Ramaphosa to devolve more policing powers for City police to investigate gang, gun, and drug crime. This comes ahead of the 2026 State of the Nation Address (SONA) on Thursday.

 

The Mayor further called on the president to end delays in granting additional policing powers to City police to help the South African Police Service (SAPS) and the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) increase conviction rates for illegal firearms, drugs, and gang violence cases.

 

“There is so much preventable suffering in our gang-impacted communities due to extremely low conviction rates for illegal firearm, drug, and gang-related cases.”

 

Hill-Lewis added that while the Acting Police Minister, Firoz Cachalia, openly admitted that the SAPS does not have the resources to defeat gangs, City officers are ready to help SAPS by building prosecution-ready case dockets to increase convictions.

 

According to the City, its officers already remove over 450 illegal guns off the streets per year, but the conviction rates are reportedly just 5% in these cases due to what it calls the “broken criminal justice system and under-resourced SAPS and NPA”.

 

“The President and Acting Police Minister have the power to change this situation in various ways. That includes urgent resourcing of SAPS and, most immediately, devolving criminal investigative powers to well-trained City police via the necessary statutory reforms.” added Hill-Lewis

 

The mayor added that the City has been unable to secure an urgent follow-up meeting with the Acting Police Minister Cachalia despite his presence in Cape Town for SONA this week.

 

This comes after the City submitted draft regulations for more policing powers as part of a public participation process last year.

 

The City’s full submission on expanding draft regulations for municipal policing powers, published by the National Police Minister, can be viewed here: https://bit.ly/4oGBvrk

 

“Just recently, Acting Minister Cachalia supported the devolution of policing powers for Gauteng crime wardens, but yet we cannot get clear timelines from him on investigative powers for our well-trained and well-resourced City police,” added Hill-Lewis

 

Meanwhile, Mayoral Committee Member for Safety and Security, JP Smith, says the City can no longer wait on the national government to adequately resource SAPS or address the massive shortage in detectives or backlogs in forensics.

 

“- we simply have to be allowed to step in and help do these things if we are to achieve the change we need. We stand with our communities who are under siege in demanding urgent action and not merely more delays in decision making while our communities suffer,” said Smith.

Western Cape places over 26 000 learners in four weeks amid late applications surge

learners placed at school

 

The Western Cape Education Department (WCED) says it has made significant progress in placing learners who were left unplaced at the start of the 2026 academic year.

 

The department says since the start of January, it has successfully placed 26 312 learners in Grades R, 1, and 8 across the province, in addition to the tens of thousands of learners placed during 2025.

 

WCED spokesperson Bronagh Hammond says despite placing 96% of all learners who applied last year, including late applications submitted up to 10 December, the WCED faced an unprecedented influx of extremely late applications at the start of 2026.

 

“Since January, the department has received 25 065 new extremely late applications for Grades R, 1, and 8. As of 6 February 2026, 99.6% of Grade 8 learners have been placed, with placement in progress for 396 learners. Placement is in progress for 326 Grade 1 learners, representing over 99% placement, while placement is in progress for 1 148 Grade R learners, with 13 905 extremely late applications received this year alone.”

 

Hammond stressed that the department worked with the utmost urgency to ensure that all learners who were not registered at a school, are placed timeously.

 

 “The fact that more than 26 000 placements have been made within four weeks is a remarkable accomplishment by our team.”

 

The WCED says it continues to process new extremely late applications daily and appeals to the public to allow officials the space to complete placements.

 

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