DJ Warras Murder Shocks Johannesburg: Calls for Action on Crime and Hijacked Buildings Intensify

The shocking murder of DJ Warras—born Warrick Stock—outside Zambezi House in central Johannesburg has ignited national attention and fierce debate on crime, urban safety, and the proliferation of hijacked buildings. Police suspect the killing was a premeditated attack, bringing renewed focus to the city’s growing security challenges.
DJ Warras, a renowned broadcaster and community activist, had five protection orders filed against known threats, raising questions about the enforcement and effectiveness of such legal safeguards. Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi emphasized that protection orders require active follow-up and police support to prevent tragedies, not just documentation. Johannesburg’s public safety MMC, Mgcini Tshwaku, highlighted that Warras was engaged in reclaiming Zambezi House for its legal owner—a task that may have marked him for retaliation. CCTV reportedly captured the suspect approaching calmly before shooting Warras and fleeing the scene.
The murder also sparked controversy online. Podcast co-host Sol Phenduka faced backlash for a cryptic tweet posted prior to the news becoming public. Phenduka explained to the Daily Sun that he had withheld names out of respect for Warras and his family and apologized for any distress caused. Following confirmation of Warras’s death, he urged authorities, including former Johannesburg mayor Herman Mashaba, to take stronger action against rising crime.
Public demonstrations followed swiftly. The March and March Movement organized a picket in Durban, attributing Warras’s death to the failure to curb hijacked buildings and illegal immigration. Movement leader Jacinta Ngobese Zuma called for a state of emergency, advocating for deployment of the South African National Defence Force to reclaim hijacked properties and secure national borders. She asserted that the environment created by unregulated buildings and illegal occupation contributed directly to the tragedy.
DJ Warras’s death has become emblematic of Johannesburg’s urban crime crisis and the broader systemic challenges surrounding property rights, law enforcement, and immigration control. The incident underscores urgent calls for a coordinated governmental response to protect citizens and reclaim hijacked properties, while addressing the root causes of violence in the city centre.
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