Witness

Lieutenant Colonel Kwazikwakhe Sibiya

Hawks officer, Durban Serious Organised Crime Unit · KwaZulu-Natal

Testified · under scrutiny

A Durban Hawks officer brought onto the June 2021 Isipingo cocaine bust by his commander, Colonel Gavin Jacob - the seizure that preceded the R200m Port Shepstone theft. He told the commission he followed orders and was away at a Paarl training camp when the safe was broken into; the panel openly questioned his account.

KZN HawksIsipingo bust541kg cocaineTestified

This profile summarises testimony and evidence given on the public record before the Madlanga Commission of Inquiry. It restates allegations as presented at the hearings and is not a finding of guilt, liability, or wrongdoing by any person.

Portrait of Lieutenant Colonel Kwazikwakhe Sibiya, Hawks officer, Durban Serious Organised Crime Unit - Madlanga Commission of Inquiry
Lieutenant Colonel Kwazikwakhe Sibiya · Testified · under scrutiny

Their role

What the record says

Brought onto the operation, but untrained

Colonel Gavin Jacob brought Sibiya onto the 22 June 2021 operation at the Isipingo container depot, where 541kg of cocaine was intercepted. Only promoted to his position that September and on temporary transfer at the time, Sibiya admitted he had no specialised training or practical experience in large-scale maritime or container drug seizures.

Scene left unsecured

Evidence before the commission places him among the officials who allowed national police prescripts to be flouted at the scene - the team did not call the Local Criminal Record Centre to lift fingerprints or properly cordon off the active crime scene.

“I followed orders”

Sibiya maintains his role was minimal and that he complied with the instructions of his superior, Colonel Jacob, describing his own conduct as bona fide. He rejected Maj-Gen Hendrik Flynn's allegation that the drugs were stored at a break-in-prone facility 'by design' to make the exhibit vulnerable to theft, and said he was away on training at the SAPS Paarl Academy in the Western Cape when the Port Shepstone safe was breached in November 2021.

The commission's doubts

Chairperson Justice Madlanga challenged him - 'So you just allow yourself to be used as a pawn whilst prescripts that you are aware of are being flouted?' Commissioner Adv Sesi Baloyi put to him that he had either copied Colonel Jacob's statement or agreed in advance what each would say, given the close similarities between them; Sibiya denied this, attributing it to sharing an office. He denies any wrongdoing.

Timeline

How the account unfolded

22 June 2021

The Isipingo operation

Took part in the operation at the Isipingo container depot where 541kg of cocaine was intercepted - the seizure later stored at, and partly stolen from, the Port Shepstone Hawks office.

November 2021

The safe is breached

When the Port Shepstone safe was broken into and the cocaine stolen, Sibiya says he was attending a police training camp at the SAPS Paarl Academy in the Western Cape.

5 June 2026

Questioned by the panel

Testified before the Madlanga Commission, defending his integrity while pointing accountability upward, and was openly challenged by Justice Madlanga and Commissioner Baloyi over his account and its similarities to Colonel Jacob's.

On the stand

Appears on 1 hearing day

  1. Day 1145 Jun 2026
I was not part of any scheme, nor did I engage in any process designed to make the exhibit vulnerable to theft. I was following the lawful instructions of my senior.
Lt-Col Sibiya, rejecting Maj-Gen Flynn's allegations, 5 June 2026.