19 September 2025 ,today, the Vaal Triangle Movement—represented by united voices from Sebokeng, Sharpeville, Sonland Park, Waldrif, and Unitas Park—mobilized in a peaceful convoy to the Emfuleni Local Municipality offices. Three buses carried determined residents, standing together in pursuit of ethical governance, fair service delivery, and infrastructural accountability.
Upon arrival, the community was met with noticeable silence and word that Mayor Sipho Radebe was absent. While officials claimed he was in meetings, the municipality’s own communications department revealed he was in Sebokeng launching a new tech-based traffic system—an initiative that, while perhaps well-intentioned, stands in stark contradiction to the crumbling infrastructure and neglected services that formed the very basis of today’s march.
These are not abstract complaints—they are daily, lived grievances:
The Mayor’s refusal to engage, coupled with the optics of launching new systems while foundational services remain broken, left many residents feeling dismissed and disrespected.
Though deeply frustrated, the crowd remained peaceful. Some expressed anger at being kept outside the municipal gates, questioning whether leadership was deliberately avoiding accountability. The call was clear: We demand leadership that shows up—not just in photo ops, but in service to the people.
This was not a protest of rage. It was a march for integrity. The Vaal Triangle Movement will continue to advocate for transparency, empathy, and infrastructure that serves all—not just a select few.








