Post

Mbalula’s rhetoric is misplaced

Police minister should be tackling core problems

- De Haas is a social scientist, independen­t researcher and human rights defender. MARY DE HAAS

NEWLY-APPOINTED minister of police, Fikile Mbalula, started his tenure with rhetoric reminiscen­t of the pre-Marikana period when he exhorted police officers to “shoot back”.

Although he has since stressed that “rough” action must be legal, he fails to recognise that he is dealing with a police service in which brutality, including torture, is already widespread.

As well as being illegal, such practices can be counter-productive to the fight against violent crime.

What he should be addressing are the serious problems he has inherited, including dysfunctio­nal crime intelligen­ce and (with some exceptions) detective services and widespread corruption.

Incompeten­t management lies at the heart of these problems, which are not due to a lack of resources but the way they are handled.

Take, for example, the topheavy structure of management and the numbers promoted to senior positions at the expense of rank-and-file officers, who are the ones out risking their lives.

KZN now has six deputy provincial commission­ers it did not have 20 years ago, yet the quality of policing, including accountabi­lity, has deteriorat­ed noticeably in those two decades.

Too many people are promoted to senior management, earning salaries many do not deserve, leaving less for salaries paid to their juniors, who do the bulk of the policing work.

Political interferen­ce, nepotism and cronyism have led to many being promoted beyond their levels of competence, often at the expense of members with valuable experience and a proven track record of good policing – many of whom have left the service, or remain marginalis­ed.

However, some stations are far better managed than others and proactive community policing forums can, in some cases, assist in improving service delivery.

With the exception of the dedicated VIP component, no police officers should be deployed to guard politician­s.

They should be at stations, where resources, including human, are scarce, as in many rural areas.

Discipline

It is management which is responsibl­e for failing to maintain police buildings and vehicles (the lack of roadworthy Flying Squad vehicles is a recent example) and ensuring all officers have access to bulletproo­f vests when on active duty.

It should also be ensuring discipline and proper record keeping.

Management also fails to deal with corrupt officers, who collude with criminals and thus pose a grave threat to their colleagues who strive to do their jobs properly.

Nor is there any evidence of action being taken against officers whose guns go missing.

In the past decade, thousands of police-issue guns have been stolen or lost, some of them from police storage.

In one incident, 43 guns were stolen from the Maphumulo station in what was clearly an inside job, for only specific items were selected, all of them exhibits in taxi cases.

The station commission­er had, on more than one occasion, asked provincial management to improve storage security, but without success.

Similarly, not long before exhibits were stolen from the SAPS ballistics-testing centre at eManzimtot­i, I had warned the provincial commission­er about members’ security concerns (there was no response from her office).

Controls over the use of guns such as R4s are lax, with an officer facing charges for shooting his wife dead with one last year.

A similar gun (or guns) has been used in the Glebelands hostel carnage and linked to a police officer who lives in the complex and associates with criminals.

This was drawn to the attention of the officer’s cluster commander and the provincial commission­er in 2015 but there was no response.

The officer is reportedly still arming criminals..

Crime intelligen­ce services are pivotal in preventing crime but they now serve primarily political ends.

Not only has the SAPS turned a blind eye to paramilita­ry training, but people who need an armed hit man to kill a partner, political opponent or business associate can easily find one – yet the police, whose job it is to identify hit men and illegal guns, are unable to do so.

Many police informers are themselves criminals, so if they do provide informatio­n about impending robberies (and the informatio­n they provide may be inaccurate and used to target their own enemies), police should intervene before they are about to engage in violent criminal activity, for that is when they themselves, as well as innocent people, are at high risk from a gun fight.

Having lost experience­d officers, failed to train new ones properly and promoted the wrong people, detective services have continued to decline.

What evidence there is suggests conviction­s for murder are low.

In the past three years over 80 people have been murdered in the Glebelands hostel complex but there is no known conviction.

Nor has there been a conviction in five murder cases since early 2016 in Westville.

The police make many arrests, most without sufficient evidence, only to have the cases withdrawn – by which time innocent people may have lost jobs.

It seems there is great pressure to make arrests, despite lack of evidence, as a public relations exercise.

Those arrested may be abused, or tortured (near suffocatio­n is a favoured method, which may lead to death).

Torture is a serious crime but management does nothing to stop it.

If it is shown to have happened, it will impact negatively on prosecutio­n.

This abuse is also responsibl­e for huge claims against the police, which the taxpayers end up funding.

The Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e is ineffectua­l and should be removed from policing to an independen­t oversight body.

Even when it makes recommenda­tions to the police, these may be ignored.

If the new minister is serious about reducing crime, he needs to address all these issues, but given that political interferen­ce has played a key role in rendering the criminal justice system dysfunctio­nal, it remains to be seen whether he will do so.

 ??  ?? Minister of Police Fikile Mbalula, right, has lots on his plate in tacking the country’s crime.
Minister of Police Fikile Mbalula, right, has lots on his plate in tacking the country’s crime.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa