The Citizen (Gauteng)

Insurance pays price for riots

HIKE: CLAIMS FOR VIOLENCE UP WHOPPING 31% WITH MARKED INCREASE IN INCIDENT SEVERITY

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

R766m paid out, with service delivery and university protests the drivers.

Insurance claims related to violent protests and riots have gone up 31% in the past year, according to a company which covers damage from public disorder incidents. Thousands of violent protests have been reported since the beginning of 2017, sparked by a number of issues affecting marginalis­ed communitie­s, such as service delivery, housing, drugs, crime and corruption.

According to the South African Special Risks Insurance Associatio­n (Sasria), the biggest insurance claims came from student and service delivery protests.

According to Sasria’s 2017 financial report, it had paid net insurance claims with a total value of R766 million – up by 30.8% on the previous year – with a marked increase in claims severity. The number of claims increased by 22% and the severity increased by 29%. Service delivery and university student protests remained the biggest drivers at approximat­ely R325 million.

Once an apartheid-era state insurer establishe­d during the rising anti-apartheid unrest in the ’70s, Sasria insures properties against man-made risks not covered by other insurers, such as riots, strikes, terrorism, civil commotion and public disorder.

In 1998, Sasria became a privately owned entity.

Last year the company raked in R744 million in profits and was worth nearly R6 billion.

“Businesses and consumers need to consult their brokers and insurers to ascertain whether their insurance coverage has been extended to cover Sasria perils,” said Hussain Bhikhoo, client manager at Aon South Africa, a data analytics company that provides insurance solutions.

As a matter of course, insurers should be offered this type of cover as the protests presented severe risks for both consumers and business owners, who could find

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