Overview
- The commission confirmed late Friday that it submitted its second interim report to President Cyril Ramaphosa for review.
- Public hearings will resume Monday, June 1, with further evidence on the Port Shepstone drug bust and an in‑camera application by a witness who says they are an undercover operative.
- The inquiry was established after allegations by Lieutenant‑General Nkhlanhla Mkhwanazi and is probing alleged criminality and political interference in SAPS, Ekurhuleni and Tshwane metro police, plus major drug‑seizure operations in Gauteng and KwaZulu‑Natal.
- Since its start the commission has recorded about 60 witnesses overall and, after resuming in January, has heard 32 witnesses over 64 days; it has considered five in‑camera requests and granted four.
- Parliament’s Ad Hoc Committee received a draft evidence summary saying the president’s actions were constitutionally grounded but that the record shows a pattern of passive executive oversight that may shape future recommendations and disciplinary steps.