Road Accident Fund Crisis Deepens: R6.7 Million in Bonuses Amid R500 Billion Liability Scandal
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Road Accident Fund Crisis Deepens: Executive Bonuses and Parliamentary Inquiry Expose Systemic Failures
South Africa’s Road Accident Fund (RAF) continues to make headlines for all the wrong reasons as a parliamentary inquiry exposes unprecedented levels of financial mismanagement, corruption, and governance failures. The latest developments in November 2025 paint a picture of an institution in complete crisis, with executives awarding themselves millions in bonuses while the fund faces insolvency and accident victims wait years for compensation.
R6.7 Million in Performance Bonuses Despite Insolvency
In a shocking revelation that has outraged MPs and the public alike, RAF executives awarded themselves R6.74 million in performance bonuses during the 2024/25 financial year, despite the fund being technically bankrupt. The controversial former CEO Collins Letsoalo received the largest share at R2.8 million, while the organization struggles with a R27.8 million deficit and faces claims liabilities exceeding R500 billion.
ActionSA MP Alan Beesley, a member of the Standing Committee on Public Accounts (SCOPA), described the bonuses as “morally wrong and shocking,” questioning how executives could receive performance bonuses when accident victims receive little to nothing.
Four Senior Executives Suspended Amid SCOPA Probe
The RAF board has placed four top executives on precautionary suspension with immediate effect, including:
- Acting CEO Phathutshedzo Lukhwareni
- Chief Financial Officer Bernice Potgieter
- Chief Governance Officer Mampe Kumalo
- Head of the Office of the CEO Mpho Manyasha
These suspensions follow damning testimony from former RAF senior manager Ian Barriel, who exposed systematic governance failures, including the use of public funds to “out-litigate” suspended employees and the creation of specialist posts without proper oversight.
Key Findings from Parliamentary Testimony
The SCOPA inquiry has revealed alarming practices within the RAF:
Financial Manipulation and Hidden Liabilities
- Accounting Standards Manipulation: RAF management abandoned government-approved accounting frameworks in favor of IPSAS 42, slashing stated liabilities from R330 billion to R27 billion
- Hidden Claims: The Auditor-General warned that liabilities for accidents that have occurred but not yet resulted in claims are being hidden off the books
- R500 Billion Total Liability: Expert estimates suggest the fund’s true liabilities exceed R500 billion
Procurement Irregularities
- Excessive Marketing Contracts: Two marketing contracts with Media Mix 360 and Dzinga Productions were each priced at R500 million over five years
- Inflated Costs: Bucket hats purchased for R11,500 each and branded water bottles for R85
- Security Overspend: Former CEO Collins Letsoalo’s security budget ballooned from R480,000 annually to R150,000 monthly
The Missing CEO Scandal
In an unprecedented development, Parliament has been unable to locate former RAF CEO Collins Letsoalo to serve him with a subpoena. SCOPA chair Songezo Zibi reported that attempts to serve Letsoalo failed as the addresses he previously used were found to be abandoned. If he fails to appear before Parliament, criminal charges may be laid for defying a summons.
Letsoalo’s tenure was marked by excessive spending, including R23 million on personal security between 2023-2025, with R10 million spent on hotel stays and bodyguards alone.
Impact on Accident Victims
While executives enrich themselves, accident victims face devastating delays:
- Average Processing Time: Claims now take an average of 3-4 years to process, far exceeding the targeted 120-day turnaround
- Declining Service: From 2020 to 2024, newly registered claims dropped by 65% and finalized claims by 58%
- R10.4 Billion in Unpaid Claims: The fund ended 2024/25 with massive unpaid claims despite collecting over R48 billion annually from fuel levies
Legal Costs Spiral Out of Control
The RAF has spent R119 million on legal costs to defend the suspension of dozens of employees, with R45 million paid out in just one year. This represents a massive drain on resources that should be compensating accident victims.
Governance Crisis and Reform Challenges
The RAF’s governance crisis runs deep:
Board Dissolution and Interim Measures
In July 2025, Transport Minister Barbara Creecy dissolved the RAF Board due to persistent dysfunction, appointing an interim board in August following Letsoalo’s suspension for insubordination.
Audit Failures
The RAF has received adverse or disclaimed audit opinions for five consecutive years, with the last clean audit dating back to 2018/19. The Auditor-General gave the fund a disclaimer of audit opinion in 2022/23, citing rising legal costs, procurement irregularities, and failure to fill critical vacancies.
Expert Analysis and Future Outlook
Former chief actuary Itayi Charakupa warned that if the RAF processed all outstanding claims, it would run out of cash almost immediately. Legal experts suggest that fixing South Africa’s broken Road Accident Fund will be a significant challenge due to systemic failures that go beyond individual misconduct.
DSC Attorneys partner Kirstie Haslam testified that the RAF’s problems stem not from the Road Accident Fund Act itself but from “rampant incompetence” in its implementation and management.
The Path Forward
As the SCOPA inquiry continues, several critical issues need addressing:
- Immediate Financial Stabilization: Urgent measures to address the R500 billion liability crisis
- Governance Reform: Complete overhaul of management structures and accountability mechanisms
- Claims Processing: Implementation of efficient systems to reduce processing times from years to months
- Legal Framework Review: Assessment of whether the current RAF Act is fit for purpose
Conclusion
The Road Accident Fund crisis represents one of the most significant governance failures in South Africa’s state-owned enterprise sector. With R6.7 million in bonuses paid to executives while the fund faces insolvency, and a missing CEO who cannot be located by Parliament, the RAF has become a symbol of institutional dysfunction.
As SCOPA chair Songezo Zibi aptly summarized: “Dysfunction is the best way to put it.” The question now is whether the current inquiry will lead to meaningful reform or whether the RAF will continue its downward spiral, leaving accident victims without recourse and taxpayers footing the bill for executive excess.
The stakes could not be higher. With over 500,000 claimants affected and billions in public funds at risk, the RAF crisis demands immediate, decisive action from government and Parliament to restore this critical institution to its intended purpose: providing timely compensation to road accident victims.
Stay updated on the latest developments in the Road Accident Fund crisis and other South African governance issues by following our ongoing coverage.
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