RAF Updates

Road Accident Fund Crisis Deepens: Four Top Executives Suspended Amid R500 Billion Scandal

Media November 12, 2025
5 min read
Road Accident Fund CEO
Road Accident Fund CEO

Road Accident Fund Crisis Deepens: Four Top Executives Suspended Amid R500 Billion Scandal

The Road Accident Fund (RAF) finds itself at the center of a massive governance crisis as four senior executives have been suspended amid allegations of financial mismanagement, accounting manipulation, and a claims system in complete disarray. With liabilities exceeding R500 billion and a deficit of R2.3 billion for the 2024/25 financial year, South Africa’s fuel levy-funded compensation scheme faces its most serious crisis to date.

Executive Suspensions Rock RAF Leadership

In an unprecedented move, the RAF board has placed four top executives on immediate precautionary suspension, including:

  • Acting CEO Phathutshedzo Lukhwareni
  • Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Bernice Potgieter
  • Chief Governance Officer Mampe Kumalo
  • Head of the CEO’s office

The suspensions follow explosive testimony from former RAF senior manager Ian Barriel during parliamentary hearings, which revealed systematic mismanagement and abuse of public funds.

Auditor-General Raises Serious Solvency Concerns

The Auditor-General’s office has expressed grave concerns about the RAF’s solvency and ability to pay claims after issuing another adverse audit opinion. Key findings include:

Financial Deterioration

  • R2.3 billion deficit for March 2025 – a 44% increase from the previous year
  • Total irregular expenditure now stands at R459 million
  • Unauthorized bank accounts resulted in R36.5 million in financial losses
  • R6.4 million in duplicate, wrong, and overpayments with no recovery process

Accounting Standards Manipulation

Perhaps most concerning is the RAF’s controversial switch from government-approved accounting frameworks to IPSAS 42, an international public-sector standard never sanctioned by National Treasury. This accounting sleight of hand:

  • Reduced stated claims liability from R330 billion to R27 billion
  • Hides true liabilities off the books
  • Makes accurate determination of the fund’s R28 billion liabilities impossible

Audit manager Siphesihle Mlangeni warned that “the liability may be much higher than reflected in the annual financial statements due to the inappropriate use of IPSAS 42.”

Parliamentary Investigation Reveals Systemic Abuse

Parliament’s ongoing oversight inquiry has uncovered a pattern of financial abuse and mismanagement that extends far beyond accounting irregularities:

Procurement Scandals

The investigation revealed shocking examples of wasteful spending:

  • Two marketing contracts worth R500 million each over five years
  • R161 million channeled to Media Mix 360 in one year alone
  • Bucket hats purchased at R11,500 each
  • Branded water bottles costing R85 each

Executive Excess

Former CEO Collins Letsoalo’s security arrangements epitomized the fund’s financial recklessness:

  • Security budget ballooned from R480,000 annually to R150,000 monthly
  • Included hired BMW 5 Series vehicles
  • Hotel stays for bodyguards
  • All funded by money meant for accident victims

Claims System in Crisis

The RAF’s core function – compensating road accident victims – has virtually collapsed:

Processing Delays

  • Claims taking an average of three years instead of the targeted 120 days
  • 50,000 valid claims at risk of prescribing due to unlawful RAF1 forms
  • Newly registered claims dropped 65% from 2020 to 2024
  • Finalized claims decreased by 58% over the same period

Deliberate Obstruction

Former chief actuary Itayi Charakupa testified that the decline in claims processing was “the result of a deliberate effort to sustain an unlawful accounting standard.” He warned that if the RAF processed all outstanding claims, it would run out of cash almost immediately.

The parliamentary hearings revealed a toxic work environment where:

  • Staff suspensions massively exceeded the RAF’s six-month policy limit
  • Some employees were suspended for years
  • Public funds were used to “out-litigate” suspended staff through multiple court levels
  • External lawyers were hired to chair internal disciplinary hearings
  • Employees questioning decisions were labeled “anti-transformational”

The Road Ahead: Reform or Collapse?

With the RAF’s last clean audit dating back to 2018/19, the fund faces an existential crisis. The Auditor-General has flagged R340 billion in liabilities for 2022/23 alone, while the fund’s total liabilities are estimated to exceed R500 billion.

Parliamentary Action

Committee chairperson Songezo Zibi has indicated that Parliament will push for strong action against the leaders of the embattled agency. However, parliamentary recommendations are not binding, raising questions about enforcement.

Interim Measures

The RAF board states that interim measures are in place to maintain operations, but with four top executives suspended and a claims system in crisis, the fund’s ability to serve accident victims remains severely compromised.

Impact on Road Accident Victims

The real tragedy lies with the thousands of road accident victims waiting for compensation. With claims taking years to process and 50,000 valid claims at risk of prescribing, the RAF’s crisis has human consequences that extend far beyond financial statements.

As one parliamentary committee member noted, the RAF’s problems stem not from the Road Accident Fund Act itself but from “rampant incompetence” in its implementation.

Conclusion

The Road Accident Fund crisis represents one of the most serious governance failures in South Africa’s public sector. With R500 billion in liabilities, a collapsing claims system, and now four suspended executives, the fund requires urgent intervention to restore its ability to serve accident victims and regain public trust.

The ongoing parliamentary investigation continues to uncover the full extent of the mismanagement, but whether this will lead to meaningful reform or further deterioration remains to be seen. What is clear is that without immediate action, the RAF’s crisis will only deepen, leaving more accident victims without the compensation they desperately need.

Keywords: Road Accident Fund, RAF crisis, South Africa, executive suspensions, R500 billion liabilities, parliamentary investigation, audit findings, claims processing, financial mismanagement, accounting manipulation

Media

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