The Citizen (KZN)

Fighting a losing battle

HEADACHE FOR AUTHORITIE­S AS EVEN POLICE IMPLICATED Cables are being melted into ingots and shipped overseas.

- Johannesbu­rg

Tunnels coursing through the bowels of the earth under the city of Johannesbu­rg contain treasure – copper cables that are being stripped out and smuggled as far away as Asia.

As in many other parts of the world, copper cable theft is not new in South Africa, but it has reached an unpreceden­ted level.

A recent brazen theft knocked out power and plunged the central business district of Johannesbu­rg, the economic hub, into darkness, largely paralysing business for 10 straight days.

It is estimated that nearly half of the power outages in the city are caused by cable theft.

“In 2004, about 4% of all outages were due to cable theft, and now it is 40%,” said Louis Pieterse, a director of the City Power utility company.

In last month’s raid, 32km of cables was ripped out, stolen or damaged, leaving the city with a R45 million bill in repairs.

The damage was so severe that it took two and half days before technician­s could safely navigate down the hot and smoky undergroun­d tunnels.

The burglary tactics are shockingly dangerous. Thieves set fire to a portion of the cables, triggering a short circuit which trips the power and allows them to tear the rest down and cart it away.

Cables thieves work for “sophistica­ted gangs” and “mafias”, according to metal expert Rens Bindeman.

They have organised themselves into networks of metal spotters, cutters, transporte­rs and even run an informal “training centre” near Johannesbu­rg.

While stolen copper was traditiona­lly sold to scrap metal dealers for recycling, now the gangs also operate from remote farms, equipped with copper-melting plants.

The cables are melted into ingots before they are shipped for export, making it virtually impossible for authoritie­s to differenti­ate them from legitimate­ly mined and processed copper.

“There is a new trend. They are getting sophistica­ted. They melt it into ingots,” said Bindeman.

It appears that the ebb and flow in copper cable heists are tied to internatio­nal commodity prices.

Official market prices surged 60% in the past 18 months to reach almost $7 000 (R99 000) a ton.

The stolen copper is usually trafficked to China and India for manufactur­ing electronic components.

To clamp down on the pervasive thefts, city authoritie­s plan to seal the manholes leading to the tunnels and install smoke detectors – at a cost of R5 million.

Eventually, the city also plans to replace copper with less valuable aluminium.

Businesses had no choice but to hire generators.

“It is catastroph­ic,” said laundromat owner Godfrey Gonese, who lost a third of his month revenue due to the 10-day blackout.

A nearby internet cafe had to double fees to make up for the cost of running the generator and the result was “most of our customers have run away,” said owner Bright Assim.

A R100 000 bounty for anyone with informatio­n about the copper burglars quickly yielded results. In just two days, 22 people had been arrested – among them people from India and Cameroon.

To try to stop the thefts, Johannesbu­rg metro police in September created a specialise­d copper crime-busting unit.

But the war against copper theft is being short-circuited by corruption.

In a suspected bribery case captured on video, policemen were seen receiving cash and driving off from a metal scrapyard.

“We suspect that officials in the city are involved, contractor­s as well, because they have maps of the tunnels running underneath the city, and the police also,” said Lucky Sindane, spokespers­on of the police forensic and investigat­ion unit. – AFP

 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? UNDERGROUN­D OPERATIONS. City Power contractor­s climb into a tunnel which runs underneath Joburg as they replace electric copper cabling stolen by criminals.
Pictures: AFP UNDERGROUN­D OPERATIONS. City Power contractor­s climb into a tunnel which runs underneath Joburg as they replace electric copper cabling stolen by criminals.
 ??  ?? REPLACEMEN­TS. City Power contractor­s pull through new power cabling as it is fed to them from an above-ground site.
REPLACEMEN­TS. City Power contractor­s pull through new power cabling as it is fed to them from an above-ground site.

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