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Private security Bill ‘being attended to’

Publish date: 16 July 2018
Issue Number: 782
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: South Africa

The Private Security Industry Regulation Amendment Bill remains in limbo four years after it was passed by Parliament, with former President Jacob Zuma delaying its signing into law. The Mercury reports the ANC took a resolution at its elective conference in December for the President to immediately assent to the Bill. However, President Cyril Ramaphosa said last week he was looking into the matter. The Bill calls for local companies to get a 51% majority stake from private security firms. But when the Bill was passed, some of the stakeholders complained it would kill jobs. Ramaphosa’s spokesperson Khusela Diko said the matter was being attended to. ‘When the President came in he requested an audit of all the Bills that needed to be assented to. The Private Security Industry Regulation Amendment Bill is one of those Bills. He (Ramaphosa) also requested advice on the Bill from the State Security Agency, and we are awaiting an opinion on it,’ said Diko. The Bill wants to limit the control of private security firms by foreigners. The industry employs more than 500 000 people, which is more than twice the number of police officers employed in the country. The government has said the private security industry poses a threat to national security.

Full report in The Mercury (subscription needed)

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