The Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Communications and Digital Technologies chairperson, Khusela Diko, has confirmed that she owes the SABC TV Licence fees.
This was revealed after she responded to a post from the SABC after it decided to axe the show, Face the Nation, hosted by veteran broadcaster Clement Manyathela.
The cancellation of the show has triggered a political storm, with opposition parties and civil society groups accusing the SABC of bowing to political pressure. However, the Presidency has strongly denied the claims.
In a repost of comment given by the SABC on X (formerly Twitter) Diko said on Tuesday: “No up-to-date licence, no comment. Hence, I reserve my comment. I am still trying to catch up on the amounts I owe. [sic]”
Ubabuze wena @SABC if their TV licences are up to date bebuza kangaka. No up to date licence, no comment. Hence I reserve my comment. I am still trying to catch up on the amounts I owe 🙇🏽♀️🙇🏽♀️🙇🏽♀️ https://t.co/PaKo1FSjq4
— Khusela Diko🇿🇦 (@KhuselaS) March 24, 2026
According to MyBroadband, Non-payment of TV licence fees has been a thorn in the SABC’s side for several years, with defaulting rates increasing from 69% in 2019 to 86% in 2024. The figure improved slightly to 85% in 2025, but the unpaid fees translated to a loss of nearly R4.2 billion in TV licence revenue.
The annual fee for a TV licence is R265.
In her position as chairperson of the portfolio committee, Diko earns over R1.7 million per annum.
Since Diko outed herself for owing TV licence fees, she has since had a change of heart and again took to X to officially urge her followers to ‘pay TV licence’.
Let’s pay TV licences guys. Jonga ngoku poster child and big advocate of the SABC being called out. I said this yesterday🙇🏽♀️🙇🏽♀️🙇🏽♀️ I, like many South Africans, owe the SABC and we need to do right by them. I’ve been in constant communication with the SABC to resolve this matter. I…
— Khusela Diko🇿🇦 (@KhuselaS) March 25, 2026
Diko said she, like most South Africans, owed the SABC and stated everyone needed to do ‘do right by them’.
She stated she had been in constant communication with the SABC to resolve her failure to make payments, but was told her debt is over R10,000.
“I am told I have a debt of over R10k, which just does not make sense to me since the licence is R265 per annum. I’ve paid R3k of it to date and am still hoping for a resolution #PayYourTVLicence it’s the right thing to do [sic],” she wrote.
IOL