by Thinus Ferreira
The South African public broadcaster has suspended the SABC's head of content Lala Tuku as well as other executives over the growing Pimville non-payment and exploitation scandal of Bakwena Productions' failure to pay the cast and crew.
Sources told TVwithThinus on Wednesday that the SABC had suspended Lala Tuku. The names of the other executives also suspended are not known yet.
On Wednesday, TVwithThinus asked the SABC for comment about the suspension of Lala Tuku.
The SABC said "Regarding your separate inquiry on alleged suspensions of employees, the SABC is
not at liberty to discuss employer-employee issues in the public domain".
Previously, the SABC issued public statements as South Africa's public broadcaster and confirmed to the media when executives were suspended, like when former SABC COO Ian Plaatjes, former SABC COO Hlaudi Motsoeneng, former SABC CEO Frans Matlala, former SABC CEO Solly Mokoetle, former group exec for video entertainment, Merlin Naicker, and former head of sales Reggie Nxumalo were all suspended.
The SABC is reportedly trying to find out what happened with, and trying to recover R19 million that the broadcaster paid to Bakwena Productions to produce episodes of Pimville and which SABC2 is struggling to get out of the company.
Bakwena Productions, mired in a string of defaulting payments for casts and crews, is owned by actor Kagiso Modupe and the married couple Rashaka "Rush" Muofhe and Brenda Muofe.
Bakwena Productions and these producers are notorious within the industry for their serial non-payment of casts, crews and service providers and damaged the reputation of Paramount Global's BET (DStv 129) channel when it failed to pay the cast and crew of Pound for Pound.
Bakwena Productions is also embroiled in a nasty legal battle with Black Brain Pictures after its founder Mandla Ngcongwane, known as Mandla N., borrowed Bakwena Productions R4.2 million in order for Bakwena to allegedly pay casts and crews.
The SABC, although aware that Bakwena Productions failed to pay and honour financial commitments as it should and promised, still went ahead and commissioned the production company to do Pimville for SABC2 to replace the cancelled Muvhango.
Nomsa Chabeli, SABC CEO, told parliament a year ago in May 2025 that Pimville will bring audiences back to SABC2.
Nomsa Chabeli knew that Bakwena Productions had a problem paying people and companies.
In April 2025, Nomsa Chabeli wrote to Tsholofelo Katlego Bodlani, the DA member who is part of the portfolio committee on communications, confirming that the SABC had contracted Bakwena Productions to make Pimville.
Nomsa Chabeli acknowledged awareness of the payment allegations against Bakwena Productions and gave her assurance that the SABC has appointed a supervising producer to ensure payment compliance to the Pimville cast and crew.
Nomsa Chabeli admitted that the SABC decided to appoint Bakwena Productions, knowing there were problems.
"The SABC contracted Bakwena Productions in 2024 for the delivery of a new production, Pimville, which is set to be broadcast on SABC2," Nomsa Chabeli wrote.
"While the SABC is not directly responsible for the payment of cast and crew — as this is the responsibility of the appointed production house — it is important to state that the SABC does not condone the exploitation of creatives and holds itself accountable for ensuring that all contractual obligations are met."
"As a public institution, the SABC has an interest in ensuring that funds allocated for productions are properly utilised."
"It is therefore crucial for the corporation to engage with production houses when issues of this nature arise in order to foster healthy working relationships across the production ecosystem."
Lala Tuku, the SABC's head of local content, told City Press in November 2025, "When we heard about the [non-payment] rumours, we were open and transparent about it. We intensified our discussions. We want to see them win. We want to see young black producers win. It was about how do we handhold."
Lala Tuku further promised in November that the SABC "had put processes in place to ensure Bakwena Productions would not fall behind on payments to cast and crew".
That obviously didn't work at all.
Rashaka Muofhe told City Press in November 2025 that Bakwena Productions would not repeat past mistakes with Pimville and that "This project will not be marked by any negative impact".
The SABC told TVwithThinus that the broadcaster "is actively managing the matter through legal, operational, and stakeholder engagement processes".
The SABC says it is busy with "formal contractual processes currently underway with Bakwena Productions, ongoing engagement with the production company regarding remedial actions, contingency planning relating to continuity of production and broadcast, and direct engagement with affected cast and crew".
The Writers' Guild of South Africa (WGSA), which says that writers - including WGSA members - are among those affected and who have reported non-payment on Pimville.
"The WGSA stands in solidarity with all workers affected by the ongoing allegations of exploitation, labour abuses and non-payment surrounding the production of Pimville."
"Writers across South Africa continue to face delayed payment, non-payment, unfair contracts, lack of credit, IP abuses, excessive unpaid development work and exploitative work conditions within an industry that has normalised the devaluing of creative labour."
"The experiences reported by the affected writers on Pimville are not isolated incidents."
"They reflect broader systemic issues within the South African film and television industry, where exploitation, intimidation, labour violations and the erosion of workers' rights have become far too common."
"The WGSA calls for immediate restitution for all affected writers and urges the relevant parties to act swiftly, ethically and transparently in resolving these matters."
"We further call on writers across the country to continue documenting and reporting cases of exploitation, labour abuses and unethical practices. These stories matter. This evidence matters. Silence only protects those who continue to profit from broken systems while workers suffer."
Tsholofelo Katlego Bodlani, the DA member who is part of the portfolio committee on communications and who raised the concerns around Bakwena Productions last year, told TVwithThinus on Thursday that "The DA notes the concerns raised about Bakwena Productions".
"The report on non-payment of actors and crew is unacceptable. Further, reports of content been paid for and not received are noted with equal concern."
"The entertainment industry is an important aspect of our society. We should do better in how we treat our artists. The DA notes that this is an operational matter, however we will submit follow-up questions to the SABC."
Jack Devnarain, chairman of the South African Guild of Actors (SAGA) told TVwithThinus on Thursday that the non-payment of the Pimville cast and crew is "a disaster that was entirely foreseeable".
"At the very outset, industry bodies raised the alarm about Bakwena Productions and their failure to honour payments to cast, crew, and background actors on Pound for Pound."
"The SABC response was to appoint a supervising producer, and SAGA was justifiably outraged by this."
"We predicted this catastrophic failure, not because we have special industry insights, but because we can spot the glaringly obvious. Weak and incompetent management will collapse a production every time."
"I have no doubt all the SABC executives involved in the decision to commission Bakwena Productions are still earning generous salaries - whether they are suspended or not. In stark contrast, the cast, crew, and background actors of Pimville will have very slim prospects of being paid."
"The commissioning process at the SABC is deeply compromised, and those executives need to account to the industry, and to the country."









