The Citizen (Gauteng)

Woman held for illegal weapons

- News@citizen.co.za

A woman has been arrested for being in possession of three illegal firearms in Lentegeur in Cape Town, two days after her son was arrested for a similar offence, Western Cape police said yesterday.

“With our focus on violent and serious crimes in this province, we are closing the net on armed criminals,” said Lt-Col Andre Traut.

Police in Lentegeur reacted on a tip off and searched a residence in Varing Street in Lentegeur late on Saturday night. Three illegal firearms – a 9mm pistol with a serial number, a .22 revolver reported stolen in Caledon and a .45 pistol with no serial number – were confiscate­d.

The suspect, a 45-year-old woman, was arrested and was expected to appear the Mitchells Plain Magistrate’s Court today.

“Two days before, the son of the suspect was arrested in Lentegeur, also in possession of an unlicensed firearm. He, too, is expected to make a court appearance on Monday,” Traut said. – ANA

The Gauteng education department has warned that bullying at schools will be harshly dealt with following a number of horrific incidents in 2017. “The department has a policy of zero tolerance to bullying or any form of misconduct,” said spokespers­on Steve Mabona.

His comments follow several worrisome incidents that occurred last year – including incidents of alleged murder at the hands of school bullies.

Mabona said that to reduce bullying, parents must assist in enforcing discipline “in and outside the school environmen­t”.

Anyone found to be transgress­ing the zero tolerance policy will be dealt with “in line with the South African Schools Act code of conduct”.

Schools are also urged to enforce their codes of conduct to deal with bullying and other disciplina­ry matters.

Education MEC Panyaza Lesufi urged principals and teachers to respond appropriat­ely when cases of bullying, violence and intimidati­on were reported.

“Ignoring these reports makes the victim feel more vulnerable and subjected to secondary trauma of adults that show a cavalier attitude,” said Lesufi.

Educationa­l psychologi­st Vanessa Barnes told The Citizen bullying did not just occur on school grounds, but also on social media.

“Bullying is prevalent in all schools, across the age groups. We also need to recognise that it is not only done on school property, but also after school in the form of cyber bullying on social media and cellphone apps,” she said.

“These effects can continue on into adulthood if not dealt with. It is highly traumatic and requires profession­al interventi­on.”

She pointed to awareness programmes playing a crucial role in preventing bullying.

“The severity [of bullying] ranges from school to school, depending on the awareness programmes they have [and] the school’s ability to provide emotional support for the bully, the victim and the parents of both parties.

“It is also dependant on the school’s code of conduct and disciplina­ry policies.”

“Parents played a role in prevention,” she said, adding: “The biggest thing parents can do to prevent their own children from becoming bullies, is to talk to them.”

Children who bully others often do so because of underlying emotional difficulty. If parents communicat­e well with their children, they should be able to identify this and seek profession­al help. –

Bullying is prevalent in all schools.

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