Sowetan

Contact crime top priority for Mawela

Gauteng’s new top cop takes over hot seat

- By Tankiso Makhetha

Gauteng’s new top cop Lieutenant-General Elias Mawela has vowed to tackle the high levels of contact crime in the province.

Police minister Bheki Cele announced Mawela as the new Gauteng’s police commission­er in Mamelodi East police station yesterday.

The 51-year-old former head of special forces in Gauteng told Sowetan that his instant priority was reducing the high levels of contact crime in the province.

“Serious and contact crimes in this province [are] rife. We can’t have criminals brazenly robbing members of the public anywhere they like,” he said. “We are going to bring an end to it but we will need to work with our communitie­s to make sure that we make headway in the reduction of those crimes.” Mawela’s appointmen­t comes three months after LtGen Deliwe de Lange called time on her 35-year police career. She was later arrested and accused of being part of an elaborate fraud scheme in connection with supposedly dubious tax certificat­es for a lucrative R84m tender in connection with government vehicles. Mawela said he was concerned that Gauteng had three of the top five police stations with highest number of reported serious crimes in the country. The stations are Hillbrow, Johannesbu­rg Central and Kagiso on the West Rand. He said he could not reveal the details of his plans as he was yet to meet with members of the criminal justice system cluster. “We are still going to unveil our plans. I have just been appointed and I must still talk to my members so that they understand the plan and we share the same vision.” Gauteng premier David Makhura, community safety MEC Sizakele Nkosi-Malobane, together with national police commission­er general Khehla Sitole, joined Cele in announcing the re-organisati­on of the SAPS in Gauteng. Sitole described Mawela as a seasoned career police officer who worked his way up through the ranks.

“He has been at the station, so he knows and understand­s what the station is. He has been at the level of the province, and at national he has been a divisional commission for Operationa­l Response Services, and he drove all the national operations including Operation Fiela.

“His success and progress is known and that makes him special and most fitting to the post,” Sitole said.

He said Mawela went through a rigorous vetting process in a bid to eliminate prospects of appointing someone with a questionab­le past. He joined the police force in 1984. He obtained a national diploma in policing and a bachelors degree in administra­tion. He served at various police stations in Gauteng as a detective commander and station commander.

He was appointed deputy area commission­er of Pretoria until 2004 when he occupied the position of head of the ports entry component of the protection and security services division.

Mawela served as a joint chairperso­n of the National Joint Operationa­l and Intelligen­ce Structure the operationa­l arm of the Justice Crime Prevention and Security Cluster.

 ?? | SUPPLIED ?? Minister of police Bheki Cele along with newly-appointed Lit-Gen Elias Mawela, Gauteng MEC for community safety Sizakele Nkosi-Malobane and national police commission­er Khehla Sitole.
| SUPPLIED Minister of police Bheki Cele along with newly-appointed Lit-Gen Elias Mawela, Gauteng MEC for community safety Sizakele Nkosi-Malobane and national police commission­er Khehla Sitole.

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