Modibe Vladimir Modiba's banner
Modibe Vladimir Modiba's profile picture

Modibe Vladimir Modiba

@mmodiba10242,490 subscribers

Africanist | Investigative Journalist | Speaker | I.G @modiba10 | ishe komberera Afrika | Entrepreneur | 🙏🏾👊🏾✊🏾

Shorts

Interview Done & Dusted WITH THE BIGGEST PODCAST In AFRICA. Thandubuntu MacG 🇿🇦 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

Interview Done & Dusted WITH THE BIGGEST PODCAST In AFRICA. Thandubuntu MacG 🇿🇦 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

165,315 Aufrufe

ANOTHER BREAKING RECORDING 🔥🔥 Today they arrested the Head Of the hawks in Gauteng. Ekurhuleni is involved. I’ll release more during the week. I’m only releasing snippets because I don’t want to interfere with the upcoming cases and the work of Mkhwanazi. I did say during my interview last week that the hawks are involved in the corruption & that expect more arrests. Here the recording says “Tibza go kill all of them” I repeat, the PKTT IS IN CHARGE….

ANOTHER BREAKING RECORDING 🔥🔥 Today they arrested the Head Of the hawks in Gauteng. Ekurhuleni is involved. I’ll release more during the week. I’m only releasing snippets because I don’t want to interfere with the upcoming cases and the work of Mkhwanazi. I did say during my interview last week that the hawks are involved in the corruption & that expect more arrests. Here the recording says “Tibza go kill all of them” I repeat, the PKTT IS IN CHARGE….

140,075 Aufrufe

Re Busy 😂😂 It’s that one of sleeping outside the house…

Re Busy 😂😂 It’s that one of sleeping outside the house…

70,009 Aufrufe

BREAKING NEWS🔥🔥 LEAKED AUDIO 🔥🔥 Ekurhuleni MMC of Corporate Shared Services Sivuyile Ngodwana is busy harassing junior staff asking them for sex. Ekurhuleni IS ROTTEN. This is DISGUSTING. CITY OF EKURHULENI

BREAKING NEWS🔥🔥 LEAKED AUDIO 🔥🔥 Ekurhuleni MMC of Corporate Shared Services Sivuyile Ngodwana is busy harassing junior staff asking them for sex. Ekurhuleni IS ROTTEN. This is DISGUSTING. CITY OF EKURHULENI

302,253 Aufrufe

LETS GO🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 As promised here are the files. 1- There’s 2 service providers who’ve shared screenshots of how the spokesperson of education in Limpopo mike maringa requested kickbacks from them for the feeding scheme tenders on behalf of the MEC. 2- Maringa defended the scholar transport tender yet the initial tender had numerous specification errors. 3- How do you release an RFQ for something so sensitive as scholar transport without SLA’s? What if there’s an accident and children’s safety is compromised? Yesterday numerous school kids in Limpopo were left stranded without transportation and didn’t go to school. THATS A FACT. 4- After these corrupt officials realised that their friends can’t deliver on the tender, of which the HOD accepted that there are errors with regards to the spec, they ILLEGALLY requested RFQ’s on WHATSAPP from known service providers to do the job. Dear Minister Siviwe Gwarube , these officials are corrupt and are dribbling you. I’m more than willing to meet up with you & show you all the evidence I have, the messages from service providers whom bribes are demanded from and more. The department lost numerous court cases last year. There are illegal tenders they’ve given out and the numerous court orders they’ve ignored. Once the service providers depose their affidavits, I’ll release your messages requesting for BRIBES mike maringa Dr Phophi Ramathuba LimpopoEducation

LETS GO🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 As promised here are the files. 1- There’s 2 service providers who’ve shared screenshots of how the spokesperson of education in Limpopo mike maringa requested kickbacks from them for the feeding scheme tenders on behalf of the MEC. 2- Maringa defended the scholar transport tender yet the initial tender had numerous specification errors. 3- How do you release an RFQ for something so sensitive as scholar transport without SLA’s? What if there’s an accident and children’s safety is compromised? Yesterday numerous school kids in Limpopo were left stranded without transportation and didn’t go to school. THATS A FACT. 4- After these corrupt officials realised that their friends can’t deliver on the tender, of which the HOD accepted that there are errors with regards to the spec, they ILLEGALLY requested RFQ’s on WHATSAPP from known service providers to do the job. Dear Minister Siviwe Gwarube , these officials are corrupt and are dribbling you. I’m more than willing to meet up with you & show you all the evidence I have, the messages from service providers whom bribes are demanded from and more. The department lost numerous court cases last year. There are illegal tenders they’ve given out and the numerous court orders they’ve ignored. Once the service providers depose their affidavits, I’ll release your messages requesting for BRIBES mike maringa Dr Phophi Ramathuba LimpopoEducation

138,693 Aufrufe

Unemployed politicians are giving us a tough time on instagram 🤣🤣🤣🤣

Unemployed politicians are giving us a tough time on instagram 🤣🤣🤣🤣

272,924 Aufrufe

The Judge President Has Been Found Not Guilty

The Judge President Has Been Found Not Guilty

73,542 Aufrufe

Live interview straight from the #RussiaAfricaSummit in St Petersburg LOADING 🔥 RT

Live interview straight from the #RussiaAfricaSummit in St Petersburg LOADING 🔥 RT

420,775 Aufrufe

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

181,588 Aufrufe

The events surrounding Sandlana’s arrest reveal a man who operates far beyond the reach of ordinary accountability. When law-enforcement attempted to execute a lawful warrant, they did not encounter a private citizen but a fortified power centre protected by armed guards, perimeter security, and crowds mobilised to resist the State. Officers were surrounded, shoved back, injured, and even dispossessed of an official firearm. That level of coordinated defiance reflects neither panic nor misunderstanding it reflects a command structure whose members respond to Sandlana with military-style discipline. Vusi Ndala’s own video and who is out on bail, in which he threatens that anyone seeking to arrest Sandlana must first arrest an entire council or congregation, confirms the existence of a machinery of intimidation deliberately engineered to shield him from accountability. Such conduct is irreconcilable with the conditions of bail and demonstrates the applicant’s capacity to raise organised resistance at any moment. The danger is heightened by the calculated manner in which the applicant and his associates sought to avoid arrest. When confronted with a lawful warrant, Sandlana denied being on the property, stalled for time, and used the presence of his followers to delay police operations for hours. His associates, including Ndala, have repeatedly fled to the same compound when facing arrest precisely because they know they will find protection behind loyal guards and mobilised crowds primed to obstruct law-enforcement. These are not the actions of individuals who respect legal authority; they reveal a belief that the law can be outnumbered, overwhelmed, or intimidated into retreat. Returning such an individual to the very environment that enabled this obstruction would invite further evasion, further mobilisation, and further destabilisation of State authority. Compounding these risks is the applicant’s demonstrated ability to manipulate, corrupt, or intimidate elements within the justice system itself. He has cultivated influence within judicial, legal, and administrative processes, enabling him to secure tactical advantages, distort proceedings, or weaponise courts against witnesses. His resources and network allow him not only to obstruct investigations on the ground but to interfere with institutional mechanisms from within. An individual capable of enticing or co-opting justice officials cannot be trusted to comply with bail conditions; instead, he will exploit release to tamper with evidence, intimidate witnesses, and strategically undermine the administration of justice. Beyond the physical and institutional threats lies a broader public risk. Granting bail to a person who can summon violent resistance, defy lawful arrest, and marshal crowds to confront police would signal that influence, intimidation, and power can override the law. At a time when public trust in the criminal justice system is already fragile, such a decision would deepen the perception that powerful individuals operate under different rules. Witnesses would be terrified, investigators discouraged, and the public disillusioned. Protecting the integrity of the justice system, safeguarding the safety of law-enforcement, and preserving public order all point to one unavoidable conclusion: Sandlana must not be granted bail. NPASouthAfrica The Presidency 🇿🇦 SA Police Service 🇿🇦

The events surrounding Sandlana’s arrest reveal a man who operates far beyond the reach of ordinary accountability. When law-enforcement attempted to execute a lawful warrant, they did not encounter a private citizen but a fortified power centre protected by armed guards, perimeter security, and crowds mobilised to resist the State. Officers were surrounded, shoved back, injured, and even dispossessed of an official firearm. That level of coordinated defiance reflects neither panic nor misunderstanding it reflects a command structure whose members respond to Sandlana with military-style discipline. Vusi Ndala’s own video and who is out on bail, in which he threatens that anyone seeking to arrest Sandlana must first arrest an entire council or congregation, confirms the existence of a machinery of intimidation deliberately engineered to shield him from accountability. Such conduct is irreconcilable with the conditions of bail and demonstrates the applicant’s capacity to raise organised resistance at any moment. The danger is heightened by the calculated manner in which the applicant and his associates sought to avoid arrest. When confronted with a lawful warrant, Sandlana denied being on the property, stalled for time, and used the presence of his followers to delay police operations for hours. His associates, including Ndala, have repeatedly fled to the same compound when facing arrest precisely because they know they will find protection behind loyal guards and mobilised crowds primed to obstruct law-enforcement. These are not the actions of individuals who respect legal authority; they reveal a belief that the law can be outnumbered, overwhelmed, or intimidated into retreat. Returning such an individual to the very environment that enabled this obstruction would invite further evasion, further mobilisation, and further destabilisation of State authority. Compounding these risks is the applicant’s demonstrated ability to manipulate, corrupt, or intimidate elements within the justice system itself. He has cultivated influence within judicial, legal, and administrative processes, enabling him to secure tactical advantages, distort proceedings, or weaponise courts against witnesses. His resources and network allow him not only to obstruct investigations on the ground but to interfere with institutional mechanisms from within. An individual capable of enticing or co-opting justice officials cannot be trusted to comply with bail conditions; instead, he will exploit release to tamper with evidence, intimidate witnesses, and strategically undermine the administration of justice. Beyond the physical and institutional threats lies a broader public risk. Granting bail to a person who can summon violent resistance, defy lawful arrest, and marshal crowds to confront police would signal that influence, intimidation, and power can override the law. At a time when public trust in the criminal justice system is already fragile, such a decision would deepen the perception that powerful individuals operate under different rules. Witnesses would be terrified, investigators discouraged, and the public disillusioned. Protecting the integrity of the justice system, safeguarding the safety of law-enforcement, and preserving public order all point to one unavoidable conclusion: Sandlana must not be granted bail. NPASouthAfrica The Presidency 🇿🇦 SA Police Service 🇿🇦

26,002 Aufrufe

Good morning comrades This is the mood and official position for the week. Let’s start TROUBLE 🤣🙏🏾

Good morning comrades This is the mood and official position for the week. Let’s start TROUBLE 🤣🙏🏾

19,871 Aufrufe

Goodnight Bazalwane ✌🏽

Goodnight Bazalwane ✌🏽

12,423 Aufrufe

Me on my way to Ekurhuleni 🤣🤣🤣🤣

Me on my way to Ekurhuleni 🤣🤣🤣🤣

11,498 Aufrufe

Videos

mmodiba10's profile picture

DEPUTY JUDGE PRESIDENT JP LEDWABA MAY HAVE MISLEAD THE JSC YESTERDAY. The conduct of the judiciary is increasingly coming under intense public scrutiny, and not without reason. When judges appear on live platforms and present narratives that are misleading, it does not merely raise eyebrows it strikes at the very heart of public trust in the justice system. What is even more concerning is the perception that, instead of confronting serious allegations with transparency and decisiveness, elements within the judiciary appear to close ranks and protect one another, even under a cloud of suspicion. This concern is amplified by the apparent posture of the current leadership of the judiciary. There is a growing sentiment that the office of the Chief Justice is being used, not as a beacon of accountability, but as a shield to defend colleagues irrespective of the seriousness of the allegations they face. The Judicial Service Commission (JSC) interview involving Deputy Judge President JP Ledwaba has only deepened these concerns. During the proceedings, he asserted that the allocation of the IPHC succession matter to Judge Dipuo Phahlane was based on an agreement between the parties. This claim has been categorically denied by the legal representatives of the affected parties, who maintain that no such consent oral or written was ever given. This contradiction is not a minor procedural dispute; it goes to the core of judicial integrity and case allocation protocols. By his own admission, a case management judge may not preside over a trial without the consent of all parties. If such consent did not exist, as alleged by the lawyers, then the basis upon which the matter was allocated becomes highly questionable. The critical question is, on what authority or understanding did JP Ledwaba rely when making that allocation and why did he mislead the JSC yesterday. The seriousness of this issue was underscored during the interview itself, where Advocate Ngcukatobi repeatedly pressed for clarity. His line of questioning made it clear that this was not a peripheral matter it was a decisive issue that speaks directly to the credibility and suitability of a candidate for higher judicial office. An honest and forthright answer was required; anything less risks being interpreted as evasive or misleading. The situation becomes even more troubling when viewed alongside the timeline of the bribery allegations involving Judge Phahlane. Both she and JP Ledwaba acknowledge that her involvement in the matter began in 2022. However, it is known that an anonymous tip detailing serious allegations and explicitly naming relevant individuals, including Judge Phahlane was submitted to the judiciary in late 2021. Notably and of serious concern, this correspondence was also directed to the Deputy Judge President himself. This raises a fundamental and unavoidable question: why would JP Ledwaba proceed to allocate a matter to a judge who had already been implicated in serious allegations brought to his attention months earlier? Was due diligence conducted? Were the allegations assessed or verified before such a decision was made? Or were they simply disregarded? Further compounding the issue are claims made by Phahlane to Sandlana when she suggested personal proximity to the Judge President or influence in judicial allocations. If there is any truth to assertions that relationships played a role in the assignment of cases, then the implications are profound and deeply damaging to the credibility of the judicial system and more specifically JP Ledwaba himself. It is therefore imperative that the President, the Minister of Justice, the Chief Justice, and members of the Judicial Service Commission engage seriously with these issues. A full and transparent examination of the facts including all related communications is essential.

Modibe Vladimir Modiba

43,556 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat