Tuesday, 9 June 2026

South African talk radio — cross-station synthesis, cited to the chunk.

Morning editionNo. 260609-M

Morning edition

Covers 05:00 SAST Monday, 8 June 2026 → 05:00 SAST Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Migration dominated the airwaves on Monday, with every major talk station unpacking President Ramaphosa's address on illegal immigration alongside live coverage of anti-migrant marches sweeping through Ekurhuleni. Beyond the politics, stations zoomed in on the Madlanga Commission's drug-bust revelations, the rollout of a game-changing HIV prevention jab, and Judge President Selby Mbenenge's court fight against gross misconduct findings. Lighter relief came from rugby, athletics and a Franschhoek food-and-fynbos conversation on Cape Talk.

Morning edition · 3-minute read

  1. 01

    Ramaphosa's migration address and the Ekurhuleni marches

    Stations spent the day picking apart President Ramaphosa's Sunday night address on illegal immigration, in which he promised tougher penalties for employers of undocumented workers, dedicated deportation courts, the phasing out of green ID books and the relocation of refugee centres to border posts. Hosts on 702, Cape Talk, SAfm and Power FM weighed this against live coverage of All Truck Drivers Forum marches through Boksburg and a Tembisa-to-Springs protest that swelled to thousands. Organisers insisted the 30 June deadline for undocumented migrants to leave still stands, while analysts debated whether the President had effectively blamed migrants for broader economic failures.

    Cape TalkDiscuss Ramaphosa's migration address and the Ekurhuleni marches on Cape Talk in chatstation cape-talk

  2. 02

    Madlanga Commission: cocaine bust testimony and Khan summons

    The Madlanga Commission of Inquiry drew sustained coverage as Hawks Lieutenant Colonel Gwanazi Sibula presented cellphone download records suggesting informant Dumi Longwe tracked a 300-million-rand cocaine shipment from Durban Harbour to Johannesburg in July 2021, allegedly enabling a heist disguised as a drug bust involving three law enforcement officers. Stations also reported that Crime Intelligence Deputy Head Major-General Feroz Khan had abandoned his urgent bid to block the commission from analysing his seized devices and has now been formally summonsed to testify on 1 July, a moment hosts flagged as pivotal for the inquiry.

    Power FMDiscuss Madlanga Commission: cocaine bust testimony and Khan summons on Power FM in chatstation power-fm

  3. 03

    Lenacapavir rollout begins at 133 sites

    Health desks across all four stations led with the phased rollout of the twice-yearly HIV prevention injection Lenacapavir, launched on Monday at 133 facilities nationally. The Western Cape received 29,000 doses for 22 high-burden sites, with provincial officials noting roughly 24,000 new infections locally and over 160,000 nationally each year. Hosts framed it as a potential game-changer, particularly after last week's deal with Gilead Sciences to manufacture the drug locally. Co-chair of the Western Cape Council on Aids and TB Amelia Mfiki stressed that funding must now follow through to counsellors and community awareness work.

    SAfmDiscuss Lenacapavir rollout begins at 133 sites on SAfm in chatstation safm

  4. 04

    Sveriev's French Open triumph and Springbok camp call-ups

    Sports bulletins led with Alexander Zverev's first Grand Slam title, a five-set 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7, 6-1 victory over Carlos Alcaraz at Roland Garros, with Mirra Andreeva taking the women's crown. Power FM unpacked the Springboks' assembling squad, noting Stormers players reporting to camp after the URC semi-final, Sharks hooker Bongi Mbonambi expected in Johannesburg, and former junior Bok Aseidi due Wednesday from France. Stations also reported Bayanda Walaza's 44.48 win in the Stockholm Diamond League 400m and Prudence Sekgodiso's fifth in the women's 800m.

    702Discuss Sveriev's French Open triumph and Springbok camp call-ups on 702 in chatstation 702

  5. 05

    Franschhoek's hyper-local cuisine and a new SA magic mushroom

    Cape Talk carried two standout lifestyle conversations. A Franschhoek restaurateur described an obsessive farm-to-table philosophy where every ingredient, from beef and flour to the pottery on the table, is sourced inside the village, framing it as a European-influenced but utterly local cuisine. Later, a mycologist discussed a newly described psilocybin mushroom species long cultivated internationally under the nickname NSS, originally collected in the Eastern Cape and Knysna. The segment celebrated citizen scientists like Tallan Moulton and Danelle Mulder, and the way traditional knowledge is finally being woven into formal South African mycology.

    Cape TalkDiscuss Franschhoek's hyper-local cuisine and a new SA magic mushroom on Cape Talk in chatstation cape-talk