Systemic failures in the Western Cape correctional system: Inmate escapes and violence revealed
One of three comprehensive investigations into serious 2025 Western Cape correctional centre incidents revealed an inmate’s erroneous release from Pollsmoor Remand Detention Facility, an escape facilitated by impersonation and operational failures, not an administrative error.
Department of Correctional Services National Commissioner Makgothi Thobakgale revealed the findings during a media briefing on Monday.
Thobakgale said:
- The first investigation at Oudtshoorn Correctional Centre concerned the stabbing of four correctional officials and the unnatural death of offender Simphiwe Celise on August 7, 2025. Inmates resisted a contraband search operation on August 6, leading to volatile behaviour and altercations. On August 7, a group of inmates, led by Celise, launched a coordinated attack, stabbing four officials. Celise later died following a physical altercation with officials. The investigation found that management failed to anticipate retaliation and did not exercise effective command and control, citing inadequate risk assessment and leadership failures. Serious failures, including non-compliance with use-of-force prescripts, were identified. Disciplinary action will be instituted against implicated officials, managers, medical personnel, and the involved offenders.
- The second investigation involved the erroneous release of inmate Thembalethu Inganathi Daba from Pollsmoor Remand Detention Facility in September 2025. It was determined to be a deliberate escape facilitated by impersonation and operational failures, not an administrative error. Daba posed as another inmate scheduled for court, bypassed identification procedures, misrepresented himself before the magistrate, and was released on warning. The incident was detected only during a routine roll call. Daba was re-arrested 12 days later. Failures in inmate supervision, court list availability, and management oversight, including biometric systems, were identified. Criminal and disciplinary processes are under way, alongside corrective measures to prevent recurrence.
- The third investigation at Pollsmoor focused on the stabbing of two Correctional officials and the deaths of three remand detainees on October 29, 2025. This incident followed an unauthorised departure of officials, leading to a security breach. The investigation established that the three deceased inmates initiated the attack on officials, who acted in self-defence. However, some responding officials applied force outside prescripts. Shortcomings in risk assessment, gang management, and inmate supervision were identified. Disciplinary action against implicated officials is under way, alongside corrective measures like inmate reclassification, stronger gang management, and tighter controls on inmate labour.
Reacting, Professor Nirmala Gopal, a criminologist at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, said:
- The first investigation reveals preventable failures. “Known behavioural risks were not adequately managed, and earlier intervention could have averted the tragedy. This points to systemic weaknesses rather than isolated misconduct.”
- Similarly, the second investigation “correctly establishes that this was not an administrative error, but a deliberate escape facilitated by impersonation and compounded by failures in supervision, access control, management oversight, and biometric systems”.
- The third investigation highlights how quickly order collapses when discipline is compromised. “The unauthorised departure of officials from their posts represents a serious breach of correctional security.”
“The recommended disciplinary interventions are, therefore, appropriate. Accountability of both staff and systems is essential if correctional facilities are to function as controlled and secure environments. Without it, violence and instability become inevitable,” Gopal said.
Thobakgale said recommendations and stabilisation measures underscore the continued need for sustained intervention.
Due to the recent incidents and instability in the Western Cape, Thobakgale recommended to Minister Dr Pieter Groenewald that criminal and disciplinary matters be handled independently and externally from the region. The high crime rate, gangsterism, and alleged organised criminal activity within Correctional centres necessitate these extraordinary measures.
“The department will institute disciplinary proceedings against implicated senior managers and officials, address systemic weaknesses, and ensure that correctional centres are managed lawfully, ethically, and professionally,” Thobakgale said.
Gopal asserted that removing criminal and disciplinary processes from the Western Cape clearly admits to collapsed internal controls. Given the province’s extreme violence, entrenched gangsterism, and alleged criminal activity in correctional facilities, she believed extraordinary intervention was unavoidable.
“External oversight is not about optics. It is about restoring credibility, protecting staff and inmates, and preventing prisons from becoming command centres for organised crime. Holding senior management accountable and exposing these failures publicly is the bare minimum required to stabilise a system that has lost public trust,” explained Gopal.
thobeka.ngema@inl.co.za
