Music is a moral law. It gives soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, and charm and gaiety to life and to everything
-Plato
CANCER HAS BEEN CURED
Ivermectin & Fenbendazole cure cancer.
Pass it on.
BREAKING NEWS: First-in-the-World Ivermectin, Mebendazole and Fenbendazole Protocol in Cancer has been peer-reviewed and published on Sep.19, 2024!
The future of Cancer Treatment starts NOW.
My thanks to lead authors Ilyes Baghli and Pierrick Martinez for their incredible inspired work, FLCCC’s Dr.Paul Marik for his extensive work on repurposed drugs and every co-author who worked hard to bring this paper to life.
I hope that this peer-reviewed paper lays the groundwork for a brand new future for Cancer Treatment.
Many of you know that I have been helping thousands of Cancer patients with high dose Ivermectin, Mebendazole, and Fenbendazole
FOLLOW ME, THE NEXT DROP WILL BE SHOCKING
The Phala Phala impeachment process is finally moving forward.
But this is bigger than President Cyril Ramaphosa.
Can Parliament hold the most powerful people in the country accountable when it matters most? Or will constitutional oversight remain little more than words on paper?
Watch the full Weekly Wrap:
https://t.co/mB14YXJfps
#PhalaPhala #Ramaphosa #Accountability #Parliament #OUTA #WeeklyWrap
Parliament, Friday, 05 June 2026 –The Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Police, Mr Ian Cameron, has applauded the swift dismissal of Major-General Richard Shibiri, the National Head of the Organised Crime Unit within the South African Police Service (SAPS). The dismissal sets a standard for consequence management that should be consistently upheld throughout the SAPS.
“The swift dismissal of Major-General Shibiri for misconduct relating to conduct that brought the organisation into disrepute is the type of consequence management necessary to rebuild trust in the SAPS and rid the organisation of rogue police officers who are more interested in personal gain than in ensuring the safety and security of the people of South Africa,” said Mr Cameron.
In a country facing an escalating threat from organised crime syndicates, the association of the most senior police officer entrusted with combating organised crime with individuals involved in criminal activities is not only shameful but potentially treasonous. The actions of Mr Shibiri, which he himself confirmed before the Madlanga Commission, are an affront to the spirit of the Constitution and the SAPS Code of Conduct that he swore to uphold.
Mr Cameron commended the swift action taken in this matter, particularly against the backdrop of what has often been a lethargic approach by the SAPS in enforcing discipline within its ranks.
“We hope that this marks the beginning of a new standard that will be consistently maintained. Such actions are necessary not only to correct wrongdoing within the SAPS but also to serve as a deterrent to all SAPS members, discouraging misconduct and unethical behaviour,” Mr Cameron emphasised.
While welcoming the dismissal, the Chairperson has called on the SAPS to expedite the criminal investigation into the matter and to ensure effective prosecution should evidence implicating Mr Shibiri be found.
Furthermore, the Chairperson stressed that the investigation must extend to any subordinates who may have been complicit in Mr Shibiri’s actions. He also urged investigators to determine whether senior officers were aware of the misconduct and failed to take appropriate action.
“The moral and legal standing of the SAPS cannot be allowed to deteriorate because of corrupt and unethical officers whose actions tarnish the reputation of the entire service and undermine those committed to serving the people of South Africa,” Mr Cameron concluded.
ISSUED BY THE PARLIAMENTARY COMMUNICATION SERVICES ON BEHALF OF THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON POLICE, MR IAN CAMERON.
Warrant Officer Karl Sander (sometimes spelled Sanders), a dedicated KwaZulu-Natal Hawks narcotics veteran with over 40 years of service, testified at the ongoing Madlanga Commission. He described how his personal coffee machine, the one thing he called his "only safe space" during exhausting, dangerous shifts fighting drug syndicates, was brazenly stolen from right inside the Hawks' own Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation (DPCI) offices.
Instead of launching a proper investigation into the theft or supporting one of their own officers, senior management (including a General Senona) treated him as the prime suspect. They subjected this loyal officer to a humiliating polygraph test over the theft of his own damn coffee machine. He even laughed bitterly on the stand while recounting it, saying he "just wanted it back."
This wasn't some isolated prank. It happened against the backdrop of major drug theft scandals in the Hawks, including the 2021 disappearance of 541kg of cocaine (worth around R200 million) from a Port Shepstone exhibit room; cases where honest officers like Sander have been sidelined, transferred, denied promotions, and harassed for actually doing their jobs against the cartels.
South Africans, fed up with the endless corruption and dysfunction, exploded in support. A BackaBuddy campaign launched by Durban paramedic Kyle van Reenen with a humble R5,000 goal has now smashed through R350,000+ (and still climbing) from thousands of donors.
People are calling it a rare feel-good moment in a country drowning in crime and betrayal.
Sander has said he’ll buy a new coffee machine and use the surplus to fund narcotics detection dogs for harbor operations, turning public outrage into something practical.
But let's be real. This story shouldn't even exist. In a functioning country, a veteran anti-drug officer shouldn't have to rely on public crowdfunding because the very institution meant to fight crime can't stop its own people from stealing a damn coffee machine, or worse, turns on the honest ones.
This is the ANC's South Africa in 2026. Institutions hollowed out by cadre deployment, protection of criminals, and persecution of those who refuse to play along. The Hawks, supposedly the elite unit, are a circus of theft, suspicion, and incompetence.
One decent officer gets a rare win from the public, but it doesn't fix the broken system that's destroying this country.