South Africa: Strengthening Whistleblower Protection Mechanisms

In a country still emerging from the grip of State Capture, the urgency to protect whistleblowers has never been greater. South Africa stands at a critical juncture in strengthening its anti-corruption architecture, with a particular focus on protecting whistleblowers.

The Platform to Protect Whistleblowers in Africa (PPLAAF) and the National Anti-Corruption Advisory Council (NACAC) convened a high-level conference in March 2025 to assess and bolster whistleblower protection mechanisms and generate actionable recommendations. Participants represented civil society, the media, state authorities, whistleblowing experts, and whistleblowers.

The conference highlighted deep legal, structural, and cultural gaps that continue to deter individuals from exposing wrongdoing. However, with President Cyril Ramaphosa’s announcement of a new Whistleblower Protections Bill in 2025, the moment is prime for implementing a robust, unified legislative and institutional response to support whistleblowers and foster accountability.

As the country awaits the public comment period for the Whistleblower Protections Bill and/or amendments to the Protected Disclosures Act (PDA), the conference acted as a crucial opportunity to garner consensus on approaches and positions on both the PDA and the broader legislation that may serve as legal protection of whistleblowers in the country.

This document acts as a Hive Document: Designed to be shared and disseminated in preparation for the public comment period, it consolidates key recommendations debated and agreed on at the conference.

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