Eleven South African officers at the Hillbrow police station in Johannesburg were robbed of their pistols while sleeping on duty, claims an article on known junk news site Newsoweto.
The article, published on 30 August 2018 and shared on Facebook, says the robbers were users of the street drug nyaope (also known as whoonga). They not only stole guns but also “feasted on the officer’s food and took a great deal of counterfeit cash, illegal firearms, stolen clothes” and “a lot of seized nyaope”.
The article is a word-for-word copy of a story that ran on another known junk news site, HINNews, in 2017.
Is there any truth to either report?

Africa Check could not find any reputable reports of thefts from sleeping officers at the Hillbrow police station in 2017.
But there have been media reports that the South African Police Service refuted the claims in the story.
In June 2017 the Star newspaper interviewed a spokesperson for the SAPS in Gauteng province, Col Lungelo Dlamini, who said: “No pistols and stolen goods have been stolen at the police station while police officers were sleeping.”
And in July 2017 the SAPS issued a press release dismissing the news as “falsified reports” and “cyber attacks” on the police. – Africa Check
Further reading:
https://africacheck.org/fbcheck/no-thabo-mbeki-did-not-call-for-zinzdi-mandelas-prosecution-for-tweets-on-land-in-south-africa/
https://africacheck.org/spot-check/the-quote-is-indeed-false-or-fake-madonsela-told-africa-check/
https://africacheck.org/fbcheck/no-china-exim-bank-hasnt-taken-absolute-control-of-eskom-power-facility-in-south-africa/
https://africacheck.org/fbcheck/junk-news-site-puts-malemas-words-in-south-african-presidents-mouth/
The article, published on 30 August 2018 and shared on Facebook, says the robbers were users of the street drug nyaope (also known as whoonga). They not only stole guns but also “feasted on the officer’s food and took a great deal of counterfeit cash, illegal firearms, stolen clothes” and “a lot of seized nyaope”.
The article is a word-for-word copy of a story that ran on another known junk news site, HINNews, in 2017.
Is there any truth to either report?

‘Falsified reports and cyber attacks’
Africa Check could not find any reputable reports of thefts from sleeping officers at the Hillbrow police station in 2017.
But there have been media reports that the South African Police Service refuted the claims in the story.
In June 2017 the Star newspaper interviewed a spokesperson for the SAPS in Gauteng province, Col Lungelo Dlamini, who said: “No pistols and stolen goods have been stolen at the police station while police officers were sleeping.”
And in July 2017 the SAPS issued a press release dismissing the news as “falsified reports” and “cyber attacks” on the police. – Africa Check
Further reading:
https://africacheck.org/fbcheck/no-thabo-mbeki-did-not-call-for-zinzdi-mandelas-prosecution-for-tweets-on-land-in-south-africa/
https://africacheck.org/spot-check/the-quote-is-indeed-false-or-fake-madonsela-told-africa-check/
https://africacheck.org/fbcheck/no-china-exim-bank-hasnt-taken-absolute-control-of-eskom-power-facility-in-south-africa/
https://africacheck.org/fbcheck/junk-news-site-puts-malemas-words-in-south-african-presidents-mouth/
Republish our content for free
For publishers: what to do if your post is rated false
A fact-checker has rated your Facebook or Instagram post as “false”, “altered”, “partly false” or “missing context”. This could have serious consequences. What do you do?
Click on our guide for the steps you should follow.
Publishers guideAfrica Check teams up with Facebook
Africa Check is a partner in Meta's third-party fact-checking programme to help stop the spread of false information on social media.
The content we rate as “false” will be downgraded on Facebook and Instagram. This means fewer people will see it.
You can also help identify false information on Facebook. This guide explains how.
Add new comment