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South-Africa: SANDF ARMS THEFT: Gauteng army base raid: Thieves snatch grenade launcher, assault rifles

South-Africa: SANDF ARMS THEFT: Gauteng army base raid: Thieves snatch grenade launcher, assault rifles

A hole in a perimeter fence and a forced-open gate indicate how criminals accessed weapons in yet another burglary at a South African National Defence Force (SANDF) premises.

The break-in occurred at a storeroom at Tak Base in the Lyttelton Military Base in Pretoria, and was discovered about a week ago, on Monday, 27 April 2026.

The SANDF provided details about the burglary a few days later.

It is not the first theft at that base, and the incident now adds to a string of other SANDF burglaries.

The latest case has happened while the SANDF has been deployed to various provinces around the country, in keeping with President Cyril Ramaphosa’s vow during his State of the Nation Address earlier this year.

The overall operation, to crack down on violent crimes, will apparently cost more than R800-million and is expected to run until April next year.

R4 rifles and grenade launcher stolen According to a SANDF statement on last week’s burglary, a member returning from a funeral realised that the storeroom had been targeted.

“The burglar door had been forcefully opened and preliminary findings indicate that [three] R4 rifles and a grenade launcher were stolen,” the statement said.

“It is suspected that access to the premises was gained by cutting a hole in the perimeter fence and […] empty SANDF equipment boxes were discovered in the nearby bushes.”

An investigation into the theft has been initiated, and the SANDF is assessing if other items were stolen.

The army conducts joint patrols and operations with the SAPS in Overcome Heights, Cape Town, on 13 April 2026 as part of the year-long Operation Prosper. (Photo: Gallo Images / Brenton Geach) On Sunday, 3 May 2026, SANDF spokesperson Brigadier General Selinah Rawlins had no update on the case.

Meanwhile, Parliament’s Defence and Military Veterans committee chair Dakota Legoete said that the stolen weapons needed to be urgently traced.

“Those responsible must be held accountable in terms of our justice system; should they be civilians, and should they be members of the armed forces, they must face the military courts,” he said.

The previous burglary at the Lyttelton Military Base occurred at the end of 2019 and involved an intense investigation that put several army members under scrutiny.

Cellphones seized and CCTV analysed A SANDF presentation to Parliament on that burglary said that on 23 December 2019, it was discovered that 18 R4 rifles, along with three 9mm pistols, had been stolen from the SA Army Engineering Formation at the Lyttelton base.

That case appeared to be an inside job.

Twenty-seven SA Army Engineering Formation members were questioned, and of those, 12 were initially “charged for housebreaking and theft, alternatively, negligent loss of firearms”. That number later fell.

Cellphones were confiscated and CCTV footage was analysed as part of that investigation.

According to the SANDF parliamentary presentation, a defence force member subsequently confessed to the theft and an accomplice admitted involvement.

The case also led to the discovery of a Department of Education official with an R4 rifle. All 18 stolen rifles were eventually recovered – some were found in an abandoned building in Ekurhuleni.

Perimeter fence problems Answers to parliamentary questions last year highlighted more security issues at SANDF bases.

Minister of Defence and Military Veterans Angie Motshekga had detailed to Parliament what was being done to “address the security breaches” at the Wallmansthal Military Base in Gauteng, and 93 Ammunition Depot in the Northern Cape.

“We have initiated a comprehensive upgrade of all perimeter fencing and replacing all collapsed sections with anti-climb mesh and razor-wire topping and contracted the installation of motion sensors and biometric access controls,” she said.

Motshekga continued: “The Department has reinforced physical security by intensifying guard duties utilising Reserve Force members to fill gaps created by budget constraints and by launching a perimeter-fencing project, thereby enhancing the protection of valuable military assets.”

Cases date back decades In 2017, robbers reportedly targeted the 9 South African Infantry Battalion Base in Khayelitsha in the Western Cape, South Africa’s gang violence capital. Rifles and ammunition were stolen.

The previous year, it was reported
Source: DailyMaverick | Read the Full Story…

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