In the gritty streets of Reiger Park, a Gauteng township scarred by relentless gang violence, a ruthless drive-by shooting ripped through the evening calm. On October 28, 2025, bullets from a speeding car killed three innocent people and wounded four others. The alleged shooters? Hardened gang members recently freed on bail for earlier violent crimes. As police hunt the fugitives, survivors share harrowing stories, and residents demand urgent changes to bail laws to stop such bloodshed from happening again.
Chaos Erupts: Survivors Relive the Terror
The attack struck at 8:30 PM along Reiger Park Drive, a lively strip packed with corner shops, informal bars, and family homes. Eyewitnesses speaking to eNCA and IOL News described a scene of pure panic.
“It felt like a war zone,” said Thabo Mthembu, a 42-year-old mechanic locking up his garage. His cousin was one of the three killed. “A black Toyota Corolla raced past, windows down, guns blazing. The noise was unreal—automatic fire. My cousin was just buying smokes from the spaza.”
Lerato Nkosi, 19, escaped death by inches. Returning from night classes, she dove behind a pickup truck as bullets flew. “One clipped my arm,” she told GroundUp. “This wasn’t about us—we were random targets. Gangs spray bullets without caring who falls.”
Forensic teams recovered 45 shell casings, evidence of sustained gunfire. Victims included a 15-year-old student, a mother of two, and an elderly street vendor—innocents caught in suspected crossfire between factions linked to the infamous 26s and 28s prison gangs that dominate local drug turf.
The randomness amplified the trauma. Residents who once felt relatively safe walking familiar streets now jump at every passing car. Parents keep children indoors after dark, and shop owners close early, fearing another ambush.
Fugitives with a Violent Past
Police identified prime suspects Sipho “Scarra” Dlamini, 29, and Thulani “Blade” Zulu, 32—both out on bail for separate 2024 murder charges. News24 obtained court files showing Dlamini posted R50,000 bail in July 2025 despite prior convictions for illegal firearms and assault. Zulu secured R30,000 release weeks before the shooting, over prosecutor objections citing flight risk.
Gauteng Police Commissioner Lieutenant-General Tommy Mthombeni confirmed the pair’s ties to the Vusi Mahlasela syndicate during a November 2 briefing. “They’re hiding—possibly Daveyton or central Johannesburg,” he said. A R100,000 reward spurred dozens of tips to Crime Stop.
Recidivism statistics fuel public anger. A 2024 Institute for Security Studies report found over 60% of violent offenders in Gauteng townships commit new crimes while on bail. Researcher David Bruce warns that leniency in high-risk cases turns presumption of innocence into a license to kill.
Judicial records reveal patterns: suspects with gang tattoos, multiple pending cases, and histories of witness intimidation routinely walk free on modest bonds. In Dlamini’s file, a magistrate noted “community ties” as justification—ties that apparently include enforcer roles in drug corridors.
“We bury our dead while their killers roam free on bail. How many funerals before the system wakes up?”
—Reverend Nomvula Khumalo, local community pastor
Grief Turns to Action
Reiger Park, home to 50,000 souls in Ekurhuleni, battles 45% unemployment per the latest Stats SA labor survey. Idle youth become prime recruitment targets for syndicates pushing nyaope and mandrax. The drive-by transformed sorrow into solidarity.
On October 30, 500 mourners held a candlelight vigil, hymns rising above fresh graves. Two days later, the Reiger Park Crisis Committee led hundreds to the police station. Signs demanded “No Bail for Killers” and “Safety Over Sympathy.” The protest trended as #ReigerParkHorror, amassing 10,000 posts in 48 hours.
Cellphone videos circulated widely: muzzle flashes, screeching tires, screams. Rapper Cassper Nyovest tweeted, “Our kids die for turf wars they never joined. Fix bail before another mother cries.” A Change.org petition for mandatory risk assessments in gang cases hit 15,000 signatures.
Women formed neighborhood watch rotations. Elders shared stories of the 1990s, when political violence gave way to criminal gangs. Younger residents launched WhatsApp groups to report suspicious vehicles. Unity, born of tragedy, replaced resignation.
Nationwide Reckoning with Bail Laws
The Criminal Procedure Act of 1977 allows wide judicial discretion. Post-Zondo Commission findings of corruption in 2023 exposed how bribes influence releases. Justice Minister Ronald Lamola unveiled draft reforms in August 2025: mandatory risk scoring, electronic tagging, and higher minimum bonds for repeat violent offenders.
The Centre for Child Law pushes further. Director Ann Skelton calls slain teenagers “warning signals ignored.” International benchmarks highlight disparities—U.S. and U.K. pretrial detention for gun crimes tops 70%, versus South Africa’s 40% (World Prison Brief 2025).
Opponents cite prison overcrowding—Pollsmoor and Sun City run at 150% capacity. Yet public sentiment, amplified by Reiger Park, demands action. December 2025 parliamentary hearings will include victim testimonies, potentially accelerating legislation.
Proposed changes balance rights and reality. Risk tools would weigh criminal history, gang affiliation, and community impact. GPS anklets could track movements in real time. Quarterly court reviews would revoke bail for violations.
| Reform Area | Current Rule | Proposed Rule |
| Risk Evaluation | Judge’s discretion | Compulsory scoring system |
| Electronic Monitoring | Rarely used | Mandatory for gang cases |
| Bail Minimums | R20,000–R50,000 average | R100,000 for repeat offenders |
| Review Frequency | As needed | Every 90 days |
Rebuilding Trust, One Step at a Time
Detectives scour CCTV from nearby malls and trace burner phones. Twenty extra officers patrol Reiger Park, rebuilding bridges burned by past inaction. Community forums meet weekly, mapping safe routes and mentoring programs.
NGOs expand outreach. Soccer leagues and coding clubs keep teens engaged after school. “We protect our own future,” says youth coordinator Siphesihle Dube. Parents attend parenting workshops; former gang members share redemption stories.
Success depends on arrests. Each tip line call chips away at the code of silence. When Dlamini and Zulu face court, residents want more than conviction—they want proof the system finally listens.
Reiger Park refuses to be defined by one night of terror. Candles from the vigil now light evening study sessions. Protest chants evolve into policy proposals. From bullet-riddled walls rises resolve: safer streets, smarter laws, stronger tomorrows.
Sources: eNCA, News24, IOL News, GroundUp, Institute for Security Studies, Stats SA. Updated November 5, 2025.
