The Independent on Saturday

Plan for ‘quick win’ in fighting crime

- MAYIBONGWE MAQHINA

NEWLY appointed police commission­er Khehla Sithole has unveiled his “quick-quick win” approach to crime fighting.

It includes the immediate relaunch of Operation Fiela, a controvers­ial joint operations initiative of the SAPS and SANDF launched after the outbreak of xenophobic attacks two years ago.

Briefing the police portfolio committee in Parliament yesterday, Sithole identified tackling criminal syndicates and gangs along with fixing the crime intelligen­ce division as his priorities.

“I have decided on a ‘quickquick win’ approach where we want to make an immediate impact,” Sithole said.

“The situation in the country now requires us to fire from all cylinders and therefore all discipline­s in Operation Fiela will be firing at crime and heavily so,” he said.

He added that crime hot spots needed to be normalised.

The appointmen­t of a deputy commission­er for crime who would head up crime intelligen­ce and detectives was imminent.

“Next week we will work on a turnaround for crime intelligen­ce,” Sithole said.

He acknowledg­ed the vetting section in crime intelligen­ce needed to be beefed up.

“We have hundreds of thousands of employees who must be vetted but the capacity of the vetting section is not coming close to match the ratio. One of the priorities is to review that capacity.”

Measures were to be implemente­d to ensure nobody was hired without being vetted.

In August it was reported that more than half the high ranking police officers did not have security clearance.

Sitole said it was critical that lifestyle audits be done on police officers.

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