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Top home affairs official suspended for `soliciting` bribes

Source: Samigration, 06/03/2025




`A senior official in the department of home affairs, who allegedly demanded kickbacks from service providers to approve their invoices, has been suspended.On Friday, Home Affairs Minister Leon Schreiber confirmed in an X post that Percy Tshabane, the department`s acting chief of director of employee engagement, had been suspended pending a thorough investigation into allegations that he solicited bribes to approve the payment of service providers. The official in question has been suspended and a full investigation is underway.Home affairs minister Leon Schreiber on Friday confirmed that Percy Tshabane has been suspended pending a thorough investigation.Noko Mashilo/Daily Sun City Press reported on 9 February that one lawyer, who identified himself as Mareng Mareng, had alleged that lawyers were being frustrated by the department`s chief director responsible for legal.The lawyer also sent a whistleblower complaint to Schreiber`s office, Parliament and the Public Service Commission. Two sources privy to the details revealed that shortly after the publication of the story, Schreiber appointed the law firm, Werkmans, to investigate the allegations.The source said: The lawyers found evidence in the form of a bank deposit and questioned Tshabane, who admitted that he did receive the money from the complaining lawyer. However, he said the lawyer was his brother and there was nothing untoward with him asking for financial help. On Monday, the law firm recommended that he be suspended, and he was on Tuesday.In one text message, purportedly from Tshabane to a lawyer, he asked: Are you winning? I only managed to get R2 000 and [I] am short of R3 000.Another lawyer told City Press that the chief director once asked for R5 000 for rent and, because they were owed more than R500 000, he gave him R10 000.According to the lawyer, Tshabane used various means to collect money from the service providers, including deposits into his bank account and cash drop-offs at his office.A senior official in the department of home affairs, who allegedly demanded kickbacks from service providers to approve their invoices, has been suspended.Noko Mashilo/Daily Sun In his earlier response, Tshabane told City Press that he was on leave from 17 December 2024 until 20 January 2025.He added: “Surprisingly, I received a call while on leave from an employee of one of the service providers who said he understood that I was holding on payments and they would not be paid. He mentioned to me a lot of things that were said and I indicated to him that we would only pay in April 2025.”Tshabane said that, on his return, he arranged an official meeting with the service providers in the office to explain what was delaying their payments, which they understood.He added that, since the legal fraternity was a highly regulated environment, he found it perplexing that the allegations were levelled against him. He said, if there were unreasonable delays or he was soliciting bribes, service providers could invoke a clause dealing with dispute resolution in the service level agreement or escalate it to higher authorities.He said: To this end, I deny having requested money from a service provider. I do not rule out being name-dropped by others when facing pressure from the service providers just to ward them off that the invoices are with Tshabane.Tshabane said he previously received an enquiry from a person purporting to be a journalist, with a foreign accent. ``I suspect collusion as we are operating in a highly syndicated environment and any number can be ported.``He denied ever sending messages to service providers and said the aggrieved parties should approach the counter-corruption and law enforcement agencies for further investigations.Tshabane could not be reached for comment this week as his phone rang unanswered. The department said the matter was internal and could not be discussed in the media.`


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