Mpumalanga govt paid R25 million to suspended workers

Loading player...
R25.5 million. That's how much the Mpumalanga government has paid 45 workers it has suspended since the last financial year. This includes R1.5 million for one employee from the premier's office who was on suspension for 366 days. This is contained in the provincial government's annual report for the 2023/2024 financial year. And, according

to the report, the departments have not recovered a cent in line with the no-work no-pay policy. Refilwe speaks to DA member of the provincial legislature Bosman Grobler.
29 Jan 3PM English South Africa Education · Careers

Other recent episodes

SA’s Most Fabulous Food Experiences of 2025

From boundary-pushing restaurants to the young chefs shaping what we’ll be eating next, we take a delicious deep dive into Gauteng’s standout food moments of 2025. Phemelo is joined by chef and food anthropologist Dr Anna Trapido to unpack the trends, tastes and talent defining the year. Multi award-winning chef…
18 Dec 3PM 51 min

Profile Feature: Dr Lesley Mofokeng

Phemelo sits down with Dr Lesley Mofokeng, Associate Lecturer at Wits University, following the completion of his PhD in Journalism and Media Studies. Beyond the lecture halls, Mofokeng teaches the Practice and History of Journalism, Feature Writing, and supervises Honours and Masters research. In this intimate profile, we explore his…
18 Dec 3PM 47 min

National water tests show South African rivers are ‘open sewers’

New national water testing has painted a disturbing picture of South Africa’s water quality. A snap survey by the Water Community Action Network found E. coli in up to two-thirds of tested water sources – including household taps and jojo tanks. The findings point to failing sewerage and wastewater systems,…
17 Dec 3PM 20 min

US ‘refugee’ centre in SA: Illegal Kenyan workers ignored repeated visa rejections

Seven Kenyan nationals have been arrested in South Africa after allegedly working illegally at a centre linked to processing Afrikaner ‘refugees’ for the US government. Authorities say the group continued working despite multiple visa applications being rejected by Home Affairs. The case has raised questions about oversight, immigration enforcement and…
17 Dec 3PM 12 min

Damelin, City Varsity and ICESA face deregistration over non-compliance

Three of South Africa’s best-known private colleges could soon lose their registration. Higher Education Minister Buti Manamela has issued a notice of intent to deregister Damelin, City Varsity and ICESA City Campus after what the department describes as years of regulatory non-compliance. The decision follows submissions from the institutions and,…
17 Dec 3PM 11 min