You are in Australia and the person doing this is in South Africa. You report at home, and at the same time trigger action where they actually are.
000 (Triple Zero) for immediate danger, threat to life, or a crime in progress. TTY 106 is the text-based emergency service via the National Relay Service for people with hearing or speech impairment; 112 also routes to emergency from mobile and satellite phones (it redirects to 000 with no call priority).
Most people here are not in an active emergency. To start an official record, use the non-emergency steps below.
Keep doing everything below in Australia. At the same time, the fastest leverage often sits in South Africa, where the person actually is.
The fastest live protection/unmasking lever against a locally-located perpetrator is the Protection from Harassment Act. A South African magistrate's court can, under s.4, direct a South African electronic communications service provider to FURNISH the unknown harasser's name, identity number and address - identifying an SA-based harasser without any extradition - and then issue an interim and final protection order (s.10), breach of which is a crime (up to 5 years, s.18(1)(a)). This means a victim does NOT need extradition to get relief: the SA courts act directly against SA-based persons and SA-licensed service providers. IMPORTANT CORRECTION: the Cybercrimes Act s.20 takedown order and s.21 unmasking direction are NOT yet in operation (Part VI of Chapter 2 has not been commenced as of 2026), so there is currently no operative Cybercrimes Act statutory takedown order; content removal goes through the protection-order conditions plus direct reporting to the platform/host. A foreign victim typically needs a local contact (e.g. SA-based counsel, or coordination via SAPS once a docket exists) to drive the magistrate's-court application, since these orders are made by SA courts against SA-licensed providers.
When the perpetrator is located in South Africa and the victim is abroad, the inbound police-to-police route runs through INTERPOL NCB Pretoria. A foreign victim reports to their OWN national police, who route a request through their INTERPOL National Central Bureau to NCB Pretoria (which sits inside SAPS Crime Intelligence). NCB Pretoria is the channel for international investigations requiring SAPS cooperation and triggers SAPS action against a South Africa-based suspect. For formal evidence-gathering and execution, requests run as Mutual Legal Assistance under the International Cooperation in Criminal Matters Act 75 of 1996, with the South African Department of Justice & Constitutional Development as the Central Authority; dual criminality is not a strict requirement for incoming requests. NOTE: the Cybercrimes Act's 's.52 designated point of contact' and the Chapter 5 mutual-assistance provisions (ss.46-52) are enacted but NOT yet in force as of 2026, so they cannot currently be relied on - use INTERPOL NCB Pretoria and the 1996 MLA Act.
For US-nexus matters the FBI maintains a Legal Attache (Legat) office at the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria; confirm current contact details with the U.S. Embassy Pretoria.
File a non-emergency report, and do the single most important thing: get your report / reference / occurrence number. That number is the key that unlocks platforms, prosecutors, employers and protective orders.
Primary channel to START AN OFFICIAL RECORD for cyber-enabled harassment, online abuse, image-based abuse with an online element, online threats, impersonation/identity theft, and online extortion. You receive a reference number; the report is routed to the relevant state, territory or federal police for assessment. It is a national policing intake/triage tool, not an investigator, and submitting it is NOT the same as making a formal police statement.
Call to report a non-urgent crime or incident and get it logged with police; a call-taker creates a record and your local police can action it. Ask for the event/reference number for your paper trail.
For a robust paper trail on stalking, intimidation or threats, attend a local station and give a formal statement; this creates an official occurrence/event number and is the basis for charges and for an AVO / personal safety intervention order. ReportCyber feeds the same police, but a station statement carries more weight.
File here in addition to, not instead of, your local police report.
INTAKE and REFERRAL, not investigation. Online portal where individuals and businesses report cybercrime including cyber abuse, online image-based abuse, online fraud, identity theft with an online component, and online threats. Issues a reference number and routes the report to the appropriate state, territory or federal police jurisdiction for assessment. Not every report is investigated; reporting also feeds intelligence and disruption. Submitting a report is NOT the same as giving a formal police statement.
CIVIL takedown/removal regulator, NOT a criminal prosecutor. Runs the Adult Cyber Abuse Scheme (18+), the Cyberbullying Scheme (under-18), the Image-Based Abuse Scheme and the Online Content Scheme. Can investigate complaints and issue REMOVAL NOTICES to platforms and end-users; non-compliant services can face civil penalties of up to 500 penalty units. For ADULT cyber abuse the threshold is deliberately HIGH: content must be menacing/harassing/offensive AND likely intended to cause SERIOUS HARM (serious physical harm or serious harm to mental health, including serious distress). For most schemes you must FIRST report to the platform or service before eSafety will act. eSafety does not prosecute, award damages, or replace police.
Investigates serious, complex Commonwealth cybercrime and transnational matters; hosts the INTERPOL National Central Bureau (NCB) Canberra for cross-border liaison. Most individual harassment cases are handled by STATE police; the AFP engages on serious threats, organised or cross-border offending.
This page covers the cross-border part. For the full Australia guide, the exact offences to name with official statute links, and the escalation ladder, see Reporting online harassment in Australia →