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South Africa targets January 2027 for revised AI policy after earlier withdrawal

By Thomson Reuters May 26, 2026 | 4:45 AM

By Nqobile Dludla

JOHANNESBURG, May 26 (Reuters) – South Africa’s communications minister established an independent panel of experts to review a draft national policy ​on artificial intelligence, after an earlier ‌version was withdrawn when it was found to contain fictitious and potentially AI-generated references.

Solly Malatsi briefed a parliamentary committee on Tuesday after pulling the earlier draft. The target ‌publication ​date for public comment is ⁠January 2027, according to ⁠Jeanette Morwane, the Department of Communications and Digital Technologies acting deputy director-general.

The policy, released in April for public comment, sought to position South ​Africa as a continental leader in AI innovation while addressing ethical and economic concerns.

Malatsi said ⁠internal checks had not flagged ⁠the issues before they were exposed ​by online news publication News24. He added that the ​draft was meant to be a starting ‌point to invite public input and much of the policy’s content had not faced significant challenge. But he acknowledged a “massive oversight” and a lack ⁠of disclosure around AI use in compiling the references.

Among other things, the new seven-member panel will review the ⁠document, recommend ‌revisions or removals and replace flawed ⁠citations, with a revised policy expected ​to ‌go to the Cabinet by November ​2026 for ⁠approval, Morwane said.

Two officials have been placed on precautionary suspension pending an investigation. Director-General Nonkqubela Jordan-Dyani said the incident was “highly regrettable,” adding that withdrawal was necessary to restore credibility.

(Reporting by Nqobile Dludla; Editing by ​Thomas Derpinghaus)