But it can’t be just another talkshop. 🤨 No images? Click here / The Wrap / Hi there 🙋🏽♀️ Now, let’s dive into these stories and more in this week’s wrap, brought to you by Verashni Pillay and the explain.co.za team. 😄 ![]()
INTERNATIONAL
▁ ▂ ▄ ▅ ▆ ▇ █ The Big Stories ![]() The police corruption inquiry: Everything you need to know. It’s been a busy 11 days since the explosive press briefing by KwaZulu-Natal top cop Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi. Recap: He alleged high-ranking officials interfered with investigations into political killings in KZN, and there was pressure to disband a unit investigating those killings, pointing fingers at Police Minister Senzo Mchunu and Deputy Police Commissioner Shadrack Sibiya. The growing calls for accountability led to President Cyril Ramaphosa calling a family meeting on Sunday night. As anticipated, he announced a judicial commission of inquiry into the allegations, a move that saw jaded South Africans do a collective eyeroll. Our president has a penchant for talkshops, but we think allegations this serious do deserve an independent inquiry. Mchunu and Sibiya have both been placed on special leave. Ramaphosa has tapped Professor Firoz Cachalia, an academic and former politician, to serve as the acting police minister from August while the commission carries out its work. Back to the inquiry, it will be led by Acting Deputy Chief Justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga, who begins work once he formally retires later this month, date to be confirmed. Ramaphosa has set three and six-month deadlines for interim reports from the commission, but we know from experience that these things tend to run late. (Looking at you, Zondo). Reactions have been loud and varied. The DA cautiously welcomed Mchunu’s suspension but warned against another “Zondo-style dead end.” The EFF called the inquiry a “smokescreen,” designed to shield Mchunu, and the MK Party labelled the decision to place Mchunu on leave “politically dodgy.” Yesterday, while tabling the Presidency’s budget in Parliament, Ramaphosa defended his move to set up the commission, saying that while Mkhwanazi’s claims were serious, they were “untested.” ![]() US drops “barbaric” migrants next door The US has deported five people it has described as “criminal illegal aliens” to our neighbours in the east, Eswatini. The five are from Vietnam, Laos, Jamaica, Cuba and Yemen. Their deportation to Africa’s last absolute monarchy is part of what the US calls “third country removals”, which were cleared by the US Supreme Court earlier this month. Eswatini has, however, said that it would work with the US government and the International Organisation for Migration to repatriate the deportees, who are currently in a correctional facility, to their home countries. In early July, the US Supreme Court ruled that the Trump administration could deport eight migrants to South Sudan. Only one of the eight was actually from South Sudan. Their families allegedly haven’t heard from them since. McLaughlin called the South Sudan move “a win for the rule of law, safety and security of the American people.”🙄 It’s worth noting that the Eswatini monarchy has been accused of terrible human rights abuses. King Mswati III has been in power since 1986 and lives a lavish lifestyle with his eleven wives and forty-five children, while his citizens starve. The Eswatini government has shut down any form of unrest with violence and at times, media blackouts. Its authorities have declined to say what the US offered it in exchange. Here’s hoping that that’s the only plane that lands so close to us here in South Africa. 👀 ![]() Superman is labelled as antisemitic, while Musk’s Grok praises Hitler Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Apparently it’s… antisemitism? James Gunn’s new Superman film hit theatres last weekend, and the movie’s themes have triggered a particular crowd. Fox News pundits have denounced the film as “superwoke,” accusing it of lecturing audiences, pushing leftist ideology, and, bizarrely, being antisemitic. That last accusation is especially absurd considering Superman was created by two Jewish immigrants in the 1930s as a direct response to fascism, and the current Superman frontman, David Corenswet, is Jewish. The film features Superman intervening in a conflict between a powerful, despot-led nation (Boravia) and a defenceless country called Jahranpur, and some viewers saw that as a metaphor for the Israel-Hamas war. Over in the actual antisemitic department, Musk’s AI company xAI was forced to apologise last Saturday after its chatbot, Grok, praised Adolf Hitler. Yes, seriously. It referred to itself as MechaHitler and made antisemitic comments in response to user queries. In some now-deleted posts, it referred to a person with a common Jewish surname as someone who was “celebrating the tragic deaths of white kids” in the Texas floods as “future fascists”. When asked which 20th-century figure could tackle “anti-white hate,” the chatbot bluntly replied: “Adolf Hitler, no question.” And screenshots showed Grok doubling down on controversial takes, “If calling out radicals cheering dead kids makes me ‘literally Hitler,’ then pass the mustache.” Musk has, unsurprisingly, come to its defence: "Grok was too compliant to user prompts," he wrote on X. "Too eager to please and be manipulated, essentially. That is being addressed." But this is coming from the guy who did a (denied) Nazi salute at Trump’s inauguration earlier this year, so take it with a pinch of salt. It’s a telling contrast: a Jewish actor playing an immigrant superhero sparks outrage, while a chatbot spouting actual Nazi rhetoric barely makes waves.
Meanwhile, American Jews are increasingly split over being invoked to justify some of Trump’s strong-arm tactics, from university crackdowns to activist arrests. Once again, real antisemitism takes a backseat to the culture wars, weaponised by those more interested in scoring points than protecting people. ![]() Analysis: Is drama MK Party’s secret sauce? The uMkhonto weSizwe Party (MKP) burst into South Africa’s political scene like a late-night plot twist – dramatic, unexpected, and impossible to ignore. Despite being the new kid on the block, it became the third biggest party in the country after the May elections. But since then? It’s been chaos. Leadership changes, internal power struggles, and whispers of autocratic behaviour have made headlines almost weekly. We spoke to political analyst Tessa Dooms this week, who says that chaos may not just be a bug in the MKP system… it might be what keeps it alive. The party, she explains, is still figuring out who it is and how it works. Before the election, the MKP barely existed as a structured organisation. Now, it’s scrambling to set up internal rules, define its leadership, and establish an identity. With no clear framework, members are jockeying for power. Take, for example, the recent drama around Floyd Shivambu and disputes over Chief Whip Colleen Makhubele’s leadership style. These may be signs of dysfunction, but Dooms notes something surprising: the party’s still functioning. Despite the drama, the MKP continues to contest by-elections, engage voters, and make decisions. So, what’s keeping this ship afloat? Dooms, also a founding member of the think tank Rivonia Circle (a precursor to political party Rise Mzansi), says it’s all about political opportunity. Jacob Zuma and his allies saw the ANC’s vulnerability, particularly in KwaZulu-Natal, and pounced. The MKP is attractive not because it’s organised, but because it offers a platform for ambitious politicians to get elected. The internal contestation could be part of what’s fuelling the MKP’s momentum. Dooms points to the ANC as a case study: its long history of internal conflicts and leadership battles hasn’t destroyed it – if anything, it’s kept it alive. By contrast, smaller parties like the African Transformation Movement or UDM often stagnate precisely because they lack that internal energy. So yes, the MKP is messy. But in South African politics, mess isn’t always a liability. Sometimes, it’s the price of staying in the game. Whether the party can turn that energy into something more stable – or whether it burns out – remains to be seen. Read the full article here. That’s it from us at The Wrap, a product of explain.co.za – simple news summaries for busy people. The Wrap is sponsored by explain’s agency division. We specialise in content marketing for
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