Polokwane Observer

CBD surveillan­ce cameras stripped

- Koketšo Sekhwela

City Mayor John Mpe has expressed discontent­ment at the state of broken surveillan­ce cameras around the city, adding that such vandalism waters down efforts to improve Polokwane.

The cameras, placed mostly around the inner CBD have been stripped of processing units and other parts.

The areas mostly targeted are at the corner of Market and Grobler Streets, along Landdros Maré and Grobler Streets as well as Excelsior and Market Streets near the Indian Centre taxi rank.

The continued theft keeps by-law enforcers from doing their work efficientl­y, but a solution is in the pipeline, he said.

“We will soon announce a major change on city surveillan­ce which will allow us to see almost everything, even stolen vehicles.”

In 2022, the city’s policing forum pointed to vagrants as perpetrato­rs of cable theft and ththe vandalism of traffic lights as they live frfrom hand to mouth and are often drug users, according to one forum member. “They break state infrastruc­ture and sell it to scrap yards, for a small fee.”

The group pleaded with provincial and local government to absorb more homeless people in rehabilita­tion centres and reunite them with their families.

In April last year, safety representa­tives from all local municipali­ties of the Capricorn district reported that there were not enough state-owned rehabilita­tion centres and that infrastruc­ture repurposin­g was necessary to facilitate the increasing number of drug addicts, who they said contribute to crimes in the city.

Social Developmen­t’s media liaison officer Joshua Kwapa said the Seshego Treatment Centre next to the Seshego Hospital was available with a 62% occupancy in October last year. “The centre currently has 34 patients admitted and has an occupation capacity of 54 people.”

MEC Nandi Ndalane made a plea to those struggling with substance abuse to consider admitting to the centre, that is well resourced, to help with rehabilita­tion. The service is free of charge.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? By-law enforcemen­t surveillan­ce cameras are vandalised.
By-law enforcemen­t surveillan­ce cameras are vandalised.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa