He attended the Waterford School in Swaziland, to avoid the apartheid education system. However, his schooling there was interrupted when the South African government threatened him with “passport issues” because of his parents' involvement in anti-Apartheid activism. He was sent abroad to stay with his uncle and aunt in Britain, where he was forced to remain for ten years.[3]
Cachalia joined his father's business, which supplied school uniforms for black students, and completed an apprenticeship at a clothing manufacturing facility in Johannesburg, then opened such facilities in Malawi and Mozambique. In the late 1990s, Cachalia sold the businesses, which could not compete with clothing manufacturers from Asia in terms of price and supply. He retained only one retail outlet, whose shareholding he transferred to the company's employees; the business still runs in Johannesburg's central business district.[2]
He then entered into management consultancy in Zurich, Switzerland, and in Johannesburg.[2]
Politics
Cachalia had been a lifelong supporter of the ANC. However, he had become increasingly disillusioned since the Arms Deal controversy,[3] and now believes that the ANC cannot be saved from the "kleptocracy",[2] corruption and self-interest that have come to characterise the party.[4] This led him to turn to the DA, who he had "always valued" "as a loyal opposition". He joined the DA as an ordinary member in early 2016,[2] and ran as the DA's mayoral candidate for Ekurhuleni in the 2016 municipal elections, on a platform of transparent and accountable government.[5][6] He lost to the ANC's candidate by only 11 votes.[7]
In April 2017, Cachalia laid a criminal charge of incitement and intimidation against Ekurhuleni Mayor, Mzwandile Masina, for threatening white anti-Zuma protestors with violence, and requested that the Ekurhuleni Council Speaker, Patricia Khumalo, investigate the matter.[8][9]
He was sworn in as a DA MP on 4 May 2017,[10] and Philip de Lange took over the DA leadership in Ekurhuleni.[11][12]
In November 2023, Cachalia was sacked as Shadow Minister of Public Enterprises for making a comment on the 2023 Israel–Hamas war.[16]
On 18 January 2024, Cachalia resigned as a member of the DA and parliament over differences with the party’s stance on the war between Israel and Hamas.[17]