The Citizen (Gauteng)

Tshwane declares war on cable thieves

SPECIAL UNIT: MORE THAN R60M LOST – AND CITY SUSPECTS ITS OFFICIALS ARE INVOLVED

- Virginia Keppler – virginiak@citizen.co.za

More than R60 million is lost – and the city suspects its officials are involved in blatant theft.

‘They dig perfect trenches – meaning they know exactly where to look.’

The City of Tshwane suspects its own officials of being part of a syndicate responsibl­e for the “uncontroll­able” wave of electricit­y cable theft, which has caused rolling power outages.

According to a leaked report, the people involved in this have become sophistica­ted, more brazen and very dangerous – to the extent that they use official city vehicles when they steal cables.

Mayoral spokespers­on Sam Mgobozi confirmed there is a suspicion city employees are involved. “While it looks like sabotage and might be politicall­y motivated, some of these cables were stolen by staff working for the city and using the city’s vehicles to transport the cable.”

In most cases, the thieves knew exactly where to go and where to dig for the cable. “There have been cases where residents did not report cable theft to the city because the suspects are using official city vehicles,” said Mgobozi.

“They dig perfect trenches to take the cable out – meaning they know exactly where to look and to dig. This is unlike a person who has no idea and might dig on a couple of spots.”

Tshwane mayor Solly Msimanga recently sat down with the city of Joburg and Ekurhuleni to join forces in fighting cable theft.

The leaked report named a study about the impact of cable theft and vandalism of energy and electricit­y infrastruc­ture: the 1 160 cases of cable theft and vandalism of the infrastruc­ture are reportedly costing the city R61.7 million in losses to date.

“Vandalism of 52 mini-sub stations now sits at R152 million. This is an additional expenditur­e that constraint­s the operationa­l budget as it was not planned or factored in the operationa­l budget,” the report read.

“Further financial losses in water and sanitation plants are impacting and depleting the maintenanc­e budget affecting the quality of discharge to water schemes.”

According to the report, the most vandalised area is Rosslyn, affecting the Automotive Suppliers Park and the surroundin­g areas.

The city has now set aside millions of rands for a special cable theft unit within the Tshwane Metro Police Department (TMPD). The exact amount will be announced by Msimanga next week.

The negative effect of cable theft and vandalism of the electrical infrastruc­ture affect the operations planning activities of the maintenanc­e teams, and increase the man-hours of maintenanc­e teams. According to the report, overtime and fatigue are being experience­d by the respective teams.

Part of the findings of the report is that the city has support from the National Prosecutin­g Authority because the metro police arrest suspects without prosecutio­n.

According to the report, TMPC chief Johanna Nkomo will draft letters to the Police Minister Bheki Cele and President Cyril Ramaphosa to ensure there is a strategy where the police and the city can work together.

Nkomo said earlier they will need to work closely with law enforcemen­t agencies and the justice system to ensure synergy across the entire value chain, especially regarding arrest and successful conviction­s.

“We need to see a situation where the perpetrato­rs are denied bail and are locked away for a long time,” she said.

The city of Tshwane is also embarking on an intensive communicat­ion drive that will include law enforcemen­t agencies, media, businesses, communitie­s and other relevant stakeholde­rs on the impact of cable theft and vandalism of infrastruc­ture.

We will draft letters to Police Minister Bheki Cele and President Ramaphosa.

Johanna Nkomo Tshwane Metro Police Department chief

 ?? Picture: Supplied ?? RECOVERED. Some of the copper cables confiscate­d by Pretoria police.
Picture: Supplied RECOVERED. Some of the copper cables confiscate­d by Pretoria police.

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