Parliament, Tuesday, 12 May 2026 – The Standing Committee on Appropriations has raised concern over the decline in the number of police officers and notes that this comes at a time when crime levels in South Africa continue to rise.

The South African Police Service (SAPS), the Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID) and the Civilian Secretariat for Police Service appeared before the committee to discuss their expenditure plans for the 2025/26 financial year. The SAPS were led by the acting Police Minister of Police, Mr Firoz Cachalia, and the acting National Police Commissioner, Lieutenant General Puleng Dimpane.

The committee Chairperson, Dr Mmusi Maimane, said the committee prioritised departments with significant appropriations. Alongside social services and the learning and culture function, policing represents one of the largest areas of government expenditure, he noted.

“Within the justice, crime prevention and security cluster, policing is a central driver of both budget allocation and service delivery outcomes. South Africa continues to face high levels of crime. This underscores the need for careful scrutiny of both the scale and composition of the policing appropriation to ensure it supports effective capability and measurable impact.”

Dr Maimane also emphasised that the committee’s oversight is focused on the appropriation and its implications, rather than on police operations or appointment decisions. “We are assessing how the Appropriations Bill affects SAPS’s ability to deliver on its mandate, including the operational risks associated with a high vacancy rate,” said Dr Maimane.

SAPS informed the committee that in recent years they have seen sustained increases in organised, serious and violent crimes, and crimes against vulnerable groups. SAPS further indicated that, to remain within the compensation-of-employees budget ceiling, it was required to progressively reduce employee numbers more intensively in 2021/22, which contributed to an overall decline in personnel over the period.

Members noted that SAPS had allocated additional funding of R568 million for early retirement and voluntary exit programmes. The committee recommended that SAPS should be aggressively recruiting and training a new generation of officers.

“At a time when communities are watching commissions of enquiry on television, all they see and hear is that the police are generally corrupt, and we are now faced with a statistic showing that approval of policing has declined. This is something we can ill afford, given that our crime-fighting strategy relies heavily on community engagement,” Dr Maimane said.

ISSUED BY THE PARLIAMENTARY COMMUNICATION SERVICES ON BEHALF OF THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE STANDING COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS, DR MMUSI MAIMANE.

For media enquiries or interviews with the committee Chairperson, please contact:
Name: Jabulani Majozi (Mr)
Parliamentary Communication Services
Cell: 083 358 5224
E-mail: jamajozi@parliament.gov.za