Ahead of June 30 Protests
CCN Reporter – George April
Johannesburg:- Acting Police Minister Firoz Cachalia is meeting Defence Minister Angie Motshekga this morning to finalise security plans for the nationwide demonstrations scheduled for 30 June.
The closed-door meeting, which began at 11:00 at the Gauteng Provincial Office, will focus on operational arrangements. Media were permitted to film arrivals and take cutaway shots but were restricted to post-meeting engagement only.
The gathering comes amid growing public tension and calls for mass action on 30 June, with many citizens expressing frustration over crime, border security, and what they perceive as government inaction.
Public Reactions on Social Media
South Africans took to Facebook to voice strong opinions on the planned meeting and the upcoming protests:
– Motheo Mothibi criticised the police response time to serious crimes: “When law enforcement needs to respond to criminals involved in livestock theft, it usually takes three to five days of operational activity before they arrive. But on the 30th, we will see whether you stand with South Africans or what.”
– Naruu Sky Mudau referenced earlier statements by the Defence Minister: “Defence minister has answered on the other video that ‘No member of the South African Defence Force will be deployed for March and March!!! South African Police Service must just continue with their normal duties and allow residents to demonstrate their rights on protecting this country.’”
– Alex Daniel pointed to border security as a root cause: “If our borders weren’t porous, we wouldn’t have reached this situation. Prevention is better than cure (our government seems to be more reactive than proactive).”
– Bumkani Skhosana was blunt: “Government chose to be an enemy of its citizens.”
The demonstrations on 30 June are expected to focus on issues such as farm attacks, livestock theft, illegal immigration, and general crime. Authorities have not yet released full details of their security plan following today’s meeting.
CCN will continue to monitor developments.

