South Africa’s criminal intelligence chief, Lieutenant-General Dumisani Khumalo, has been arrested in a sweeping crackdown on corruption within the nation’s police service.
The top-ranking official was apprehended at Johannesburg’s main international airport by members of an elite anti-corruption unit, according to local media reports.
Gen Khumalo will be arraigned before court alongside six other senior officers, all of whom are now facing allegations linked to fraud and corruption. The case, still in its early stages, marks a significant development in an ongoing investigation into suspected misuse of intelligence funds and questionable appointments within the South African Police Service (SAPS).
Their lawyer informed the court that all seven defendants would “plead not guilty to any charges laid against them.”
The specifics of the case remain undisclosed, but insiders suggest the charges relate to mismanagement and possible embezzlement of covert operational funds. These arrests are part of a broader effort to root out wrongdoing in the SAPS’ Crime Intelligence division. Just two weeks prior, three other senior officials from the unit were detained on similar charges.

Another Wave of High-profile Arrests
This deepening scandal has cast a shadow over the Crime Intelligence branch, whose mandate is to gather and act on information that helps prevent and prosecute criminal activity. The recent developments have prompted growing alarm among political leaders, civil society, and the public.
The Democratic Alliance (DA), South Africa’s second-largest party and a key member of the coalition government, lauded the arrests as a vital intervention to salvage a compromised institution. “This points to yet another serious breach of trust within a critical state institution tasked with performing our nation’s policing functions and mandate,” the DA stated, adding that the operation was “a step in rescuing an organisation on the brink of collapse.”
Meanwhile, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party offered a sharper rebuke, stating the arrests were not merely individual acts of misconduct but rather “the latest symptom of a sick, and hollowed-out policing system, which urgently requires structural overhaul.”
Gen Khumalo, who assumed leadership of the Crime Intelligence unit in 2022, has served across various branches of the police service for more than 20 years. His rise to the top came amid long-standing concerns about corruption within SAPS, particularly in intelligence and elite crime-fighting units.
Public confidence in SAPS has been repeatedly undermined by a string of high-profile corruption cases involving senior law enforcement figures. One of the most infamous examples remains the case of former National Police Commissioner and Interpol President Jackie Selebi, who in 2010 was sentenced to 15 years in prison for accepting bribes exceeding $160,000 from a convicted drug trafficker, Glenn Agliotti. His conviction was widely seen as a watershed moment for anti-corruption efforts in the justice system.
In June 2025, further embarrassment struck when three members of KwaZulu-Natal’s Provincial Taxi Violence Unit—Madoda Mduduzi Mhlongo, Siyabonga Herbert Mabhida, and Prince Ntsikelelo Shezi—were convicted for soliciting a R200,000 bribe from suspects under threat of arrest. The trio was caught in a sting operation and sentenced after a protracted trial, reinforcing concerns over the pervasive culture of impunity in SAPS.
The 2020 assassination of Charl Kinnear, a senior police officer probing organized crime, brought additional urgency to the need for reform. Kinnear was killed outside his home while investigating illegal gun racketeering involving underworld figures and corrupt officers, sparking national outrage and multiple probes into rogue elements within the police force.
These incidents, including the current charges against Gen Khumalo, underline the gravity of corruption within South Africa’s policing institutions. Observers argue that without systematic reforms, stringent oversight, and accountability at all levels, the integrity of law enforcement remains dangerously compromised.
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