The Citizen (Gauteng)

Crime intelligen­ce flops

POST-MDLULI: NUMEROUS INSTANCES HIGHLIGHT ITS DISFUNCTIO­NALITY

- Amanda Watson news@citizen.co.za

Police appear to be unaware of criminal acts in the pipeline.

The latest onslaught on the economy at the Mooi River toll plaza in KwaZulu-Natal, where 35 trucks were torched recently, shows the crime intelligen­ce division of the South African Police Service (Saps) has been caught napping.

The violent protest in Mahikeng in Northern Province and yesterday’s protests in Lenasia and Eldorado Park in Johannesbu­rg are other examples of police being apparently unaware of what’s brewing.

“It’s intelligen­ce in general,” said Centre for Constituti­onal Rights director Phephelaph­i Dube. “If you consider the current dispute between the inspector-general and the head of the State Security Agency, the real risk is that personal battles and internal politics are crippling these organisati­ons.”

This was why there were so many flare-ups in the country, she added. “What happened at Mooi River, where 35 trucks were burnt, clearly somebody planned it.”

Barely a month after an initial protest, about R200 million in vehicles and products went up in flames in Mooi River.

The budget vote – R91.8 billion for the police in total, R3.8 billion of which is for crime intelligen­ce – noted that crime intelligen­ce completed 876 operations successful­ly last year.

“However, the rate of decline is very low,” the 2016-17 Statistics SA Victims of Crime survey stated. StatsSA noted the number of incidents of crime per household had not followed the same pattern. “In fact, for most types of crime this indicator has been increasing. Thus, fewer households are victimised, but more often.” Crime intelligen­ce’s problems were legion and many seemed to originate with former president Jacob Zuma’s appointmen­t of Richard Mdluli as head of police crime intelligen­ce in 2009, the Institute for Security Studies’ Gareth Newham said.

He said former crime intelligen­ce internal auditing head Kobus Roos reported serious evidence of fraud and corruption relating to the secret services account to Mdluli. “In response, Roos was transferre­d. Crime intelligen­ce commander Mark Hankel gathered evidence on how Mdluli and others had allegedly plundered the secret services account. He too was forced out.”

Crime intelligen­ce has only made the news in instances such as the arrest of the division’s Sergeant Nandi Rose Nkosi for alleged involvemen­t in a murder attempt on forensic consultant Paul O’Sullivan, Mdluli’s ongoing case and allegation­s he was still running the division despite his suspension. Then there was “Captain KGB” Morris Tshabalala, who was appointed to the division despite his armed robbery conviction.

Former acting head Major-General Pat Mokushane allegedly did not have security clearance and Brigadier Leonora Bamuza-Phetlhe was accused of fabricatin­g security clearance for him.

Saps did not respond to requests for informatio­n by the time of going to print. –

The problem is intelligen­ce in general.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? Russian Su-25 fighter jets release smoke in the colours of the Russian flag while flying over Red Square during a rehearsal yesterday for the Victory Day military parade in Moscow. Russia celebrates the 73rd anniversar­y of the 1945 victory over Nazi...
Picture: AFP Russian Su-25 fighter jets release smoke in the colours of the Russian flag while flying over Red Square during a rehearsal yesterday for the Victory Day military parade in Moscow. Russia celebrates the 73rd anniversar­y of the 1945 victory over Nazi...

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