Witness

Julius Malema

EFF leader; Member of Parliament · South Africa

Named in court papers

The leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) and a Member of Parliament. Malema is not a commission witness and has not been charged. His name arises from a supporting affidavit by commission investigator Tshepo Nyatlo, filed in the public court record (page 009124) over Maj-Gen Feroz Khan's seized devices, and from the commission's summons to Khan, which asks him to explain his relationship with Malema. Malema has publicly described Khan as a longtime acquaintance from their ANC days and denied any wrongdoing. These are untested allegations in court papers; no findings have been made and Malema is presumed innocent.

Julius MalemaEFFFeroz KhanMadlanga CommissionNamed in court papers

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.

Awaiting appearanceNo portrait on the public record yet

Their role

What the record says

Named in the commission's summons to Khan

The commission's summons requires Maj-Gen Feroz Khan to explain 'the nature of your relationship with Mr Malema', and whether Malema undertook to campaign politically to protect Khan from disciplinary action over financial misconduct while Khan controlled Crime Intelligence accounts. The summons frames these as questions for Khan to answer on 1 July 2026, not as findings.

Alleged undertaking to politically protect Khan

The Nyatlo affidavit alleges Malema undertook to campaign politically to shield Khan from dismissal from Crime Intelligence. It cites a 5 September 2021 voice note in which businessman Mohammed Sayed allegedly relayed that Malema said things were 'moving smoothly.' Untested allegation; presumed innocent.

Alleged Parliamentary questions to remove the Inspector-General of Intelligence

The affidavit alleges Khan and Sayed engineered an attempt to remove then Inspector-General of Intelligence Dr Isaac Dintwe by planting questions for the EFF to pose in Parliament, to trap him in a false statement. Sayed allegedly forwarded the questions referencing Malema; the EFF later raised broadly similar questions. Dr Dintwe is named as the intended target, not as a wrongdoer. Untested allegation.

Alleged receipt of a complainant's details

The affidavit alleges that, at Sayed's request, Khan used his SAPS authority to obtain and pass to Malema the name and home address of a person who had laid a complaint against Malema. Untested allegation in a public court document; presumed innocent.

Alleged Conalinks funding of the EFF

The affidavit links Sayed's business Conalinks to a reported R650,000 donation to the EFF and a R2 million advance to Malema, and references Sayed's associate making a Sandton penthouse available to him. These are untested allegations; the source of party funding is contested and no finding has been made.

Alleged to have shielded Khan from Parliament's ad hoc committee

MK Party MP Vusi Shongwe testified before the Madlanga Commission on 30 June 2026 that, on Parliament's ad hoc committee on policing, Malema was the most vocal in opposing Maj-Gen Feroz Khan being called to testify - though Shongwe said other parties also supported keeping Khan off the witness list. This is untested evidence of a witness's recollection of a committee process; Malema has not answered it before the commission and is presumed innocent.

Malema's response

Malema has repeatedly described Khan as a longtime acquaintance from their ANC days and denied any wrongdoing in the relationship. None of the allegations has been tested in court and no findings have been made against him. Khan is expected to give his own version when he testifies on 1 July 2026.