Update
GEORGE NEWS - Premier Alan Winde has called for the police investigation into the deadly George building collapse to be expedited, following confirmation that 65% of the South African Police Service’s probe is now complete.
Winde met with Western Cape Police Commissioner, Lieutenant-General Thembisile Patekile, on Friday, 11 April, to receive a detailed update on the investigation. Captain Johan de Lange, who is leading the police probe, also attended the briefing.
While Winde welcomed the progress made, he stressed the importance of swiftly concluding the investigation - without compromising the integrity of the case.
“This investigation must be thorough and watertight to ensure it holds up to prosecutorial scrutiny,” said Winde.
“But it is also essential that we bring clarity and closure to the survivors, their families, and the relatives of those who lost their lives. They deserve justice delivered with care, compassion, and professionalism.”
He urged Patekile to take all necessary steps to accelerate the process, emphasising police’s primary responsibility in leading the criminal investigation into the collapse.
In January, Winde handed over the findings from an independent structural engineering investigation, commissioned by the Western Cape Government, to Patekile and the investigating team. Winde reiterated that the province had launched its own inquiry due to the magnitude of the tragedy and its impact on the people of the Western Cape.
“The technical findings in our report are substantial and will support the SAPS in uncovering what led to this catastrophic incident,” Winde stated.
However, given the sensitivity of the ongoing investigation, the findings of the provincial government’s report remain confidential. Making the contents public could jeopardise the criminal probe, Winde cautioned.
Winde also committed to writing to key stakeholders to request the acceleration of their respective investigations, reinforcing the call for coordinated and swift action across all spheres involved.
“This is not a matter for trial by media,” he said. “We owe it to those affected to ensure this case is resolved with integrity and urgency.”
Rescue and recovery teams burning the midnight oil at the Victoria Street building disaster sight, following the May 2024 building collapse.
DA pushes for answers on building collapse
The Democratic Alliance (DA) in the Western Cape is calling for urgent accountability following the deadly collapse in May 2024, which claimed 34 lives.
In a statement over the weekend the party says it has requested that Human Settlements Minister Thembisile Simelane, the NHBRC, George Municipality, and other key stakeholders appear before the Western Cape Parliament’s Standing Committee on Infrastructure to explain the findings of the final NHBRC report, released last week.
The report flagged serious regulatory irregularities, and the minister confirmed it would be handed to law enforcement for possible prosecution.
“This was a failure of governance and oversight,” said DA infrastructure spokesperson Dirk Wessels. “Families deserve answers, and the public deserves transparency.”
Previous articles:
- Simelane reveals George flaws
- Building council and contractor under fire
- More officials suspended over George building collapse
- Update Victoria Str building disaster: Municipality responds to NHBRC investigative report
- George building collapse: Minister details investigative findings
- NHBRC preliminary report on building collapse
- Simelane commits to implement recommendations into George building collapse
‘We bring you the latest Garden Route, Hessequa, Karoo news’