Mail & Guardian
Mail & Guardian
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Criminal sanctions for professional enablers are vital to changing the way of doing business that facilitates and encourages corruption. (Photo by Gallo Images / Sowetan / Alon Skuy)

State capture: Professional enablers can and must be held accountable for their role

German software company SAP will cough up R2.2 billion. It’s a good start but not the end of the road

Transnet faced intense scrutiny in Parliament as MPs raised concerns about rising debt, weak governance and persistent audit failures in spite of signs of recovery

SIU finalising Transnet state capture cases but financial recovery slow

The Special Investigating Unit told parliament that settlement agreements with various companies were in the pipeline

Despite problems in Nigeria, Standard Bank said it anticipates more growth from its Africa operations. (Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Standard Bank employee ‘steals’ R6.3 million in clever scam

Henry McMurray allegedly added zeros to amounts as low as R47 in the apparent theft

SAP customers can build an app, an automated process or a website using a drag-and-drop function without coding knowledge.

SAP Build lets business users create apps, addresses skills shortage

Low code platforms provide business users with little to no technical knowledge the ability to build apps to supplement their enterprise solutions

Campaigner: A young Peter Hain addresses an anti-apartheid meeting in London. (Photo by Watford/Mirrorpix/Mirrorpix via Getty Images)

Global players enabled ‘Zupta’ corruption

The Zupta decade: Governments and global corporates, banks and consultants must stop enabling money laundering

Three strikes against KPMG – now what?

The private-sector players who facilitated public-sector fraud

Let us never forget the private-sector players who facilitated public-sector fraud

Without providing any specifics as to which form it would take, the United States embassy has warned of a possible terror attack in Johannesburg’s wealthy Sandton area this Saturday.

How to rescue SA’s ailing economy

2020 was a challenging year for everybody, with no growth forecast in the economy, fears of a deep recession and a jobs bloodbath. Three experts contextualise this situation,…

(Delwyn Verasamy/M&G)

SIU wont relent as Lepelle Northern Water pushback against corruption probe

The SIU is investigating a water project in Giyani which was cost between R1.2-million and R1.4-million to drill a borehole

The theme for World Health Day is ‘healthy beginnings, hopeful futures’ and aims to encourage governments to take actions to reduce mothers’ deaths during pregnancy and childbirth.

Ramaphosa gives go-ahead for new SIU probes

President Ramaphosa has authorised the Special Investigations Unit to look into corruption in a few government sectors

Odd? The RAF’s Lindelwa Jabavu approved a R10-million payment to SAP.

RAF mum on mystery payments

There is allegedly no record for why the acting chief executive paid SAP R10-million last year

Fox-Martin told reporters that the company indicated to the Directorate for Priority Criminal Investigations

Software giant SAP faces charges over Gupta-linked payments

A recently-concluded internal SAP investigation found irregularities in the management of third party transactions

A protest to mark the first anniversary of the Delhi gang rape

Editorial: Putting ethics ahead of profits

The inclination to further entrench the reach of the private sector to plug the gaps left by the government will be our doom

HR manager for SAP Africa, Queen Mokonoto

Leading African growth

As the HR manager for SAP Africa, Queen Mokonoto is responsible for supporting the SAP business interests across the continent.

Knowing the right people

Knowing the right people

People are crucial to SAP’s continued success.