Exposed: Corruption Syndicates in Vehicle Licensing Schemes

by Rachel Morgan News Editor

A sweeping forensic investigation conducted by the Department of Home Affairs and the Road Traffic Management Corporation (RTMC) has exposed a massive corruption network facilitating the illegal registration of vehicles and the issuance of driver’s licenses to foreign nationals. By analyzing over a million records dating back to 2000, investigators discovered that nearly 90% of vehicles registered by foreign nationals could not be verified against valid immigration records.

The Scope of the Fraud

The investigation was triggered in 2019 after officials identified an unusual surge in applications for traffic register numbers (TRNs) in Barkly West, a town in the Northern Cape. Discrepancies included multiple applicants using the same physical address and the submission of identical supporting documents at different licensing offices within minutes of each other. Home Affairs noted a suspicious increase in these registrations between 2010 and 2023.

Constance Moitse, Deputy Director-General for Counter Corruption, addressed Parliament’s Home Affairs and Transport committees regarding the findings. “We have shown that there are syndicates working here,” Moitse stated. “We have shown the officers who are prevalent in doing this. We exactly know the officials that are involved in this.”

Did You Know?
The investigation uncovered that many vehicles, including heavy-duty commercial trucks and public transport buses, were registered on national databases under the names of South African citizens, despite the actual owners being primarily from Nigeria, India, China, and Somalia.

Operational Hubs and Implications

The majority of these fraudulent registrations were funneled through compromised municipal traffic offices located in Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, and the Western Cape. Data presented to lawmakers highlighted that Zimbabwean nationals were frequently linked to illegally registered buses and trucks, while Ethiopian nationals were identified as being most implicated in obtaining heavy vehicles using unverified asylum seeker permits.

RTMC and the Hawks pounce on an alleged multimillion-rand vehicle licensing fraud ring in Mpumalanga
Expert Insight:
The systemic nature of this fraud, which has bypassed immigration oversight for over a decade, suggests that the integrity of national transport databases may be severely compromised. The involvement of specific officials and organized syndicates points to a deep-seated vulnerability in municipal licensing processes that could take significant time and legislative intervention to dismantle.

Moving forward, the identification of specific compromised offices and involved officials may lead to a wave of administrative disciplinary actions or criminal prosecutions. Authorities could also implement stricter verification protocols for TRN applications to ensure that future registrations align with valid immigration documentation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a traffic register number (TRN)?
A TRN is a document that all foreign nationals are legally required to obtain in order to purchase, register, or license a motor vehicle within South Africa.

Frequently Asked Questions
Vehicle Licensing Schemes Western Cape

Which provinces were most affected by the fraudulent registrations?
The investigation identified that the majority of fraudulent registrations were processed through municipal traffic offices in Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, and the Western Cape.

How did the investigation identify the fraudulent activity?
Investigators analyzed more than a million records from 2000 onwards, uncovering anomalies such as multiple applicants sharing the same address and the submission of duplicate documents at different licensing offices in close succession.

What measures should be prioritized to restore the integrity of the national vehicle registration database?

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