Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Police, communitie­s must join hands to fight crime

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need to be known to it.

Should a bona fide resident take in a lodger, he must submit the lodger’s identity details to the NWC, at least or to the ZRP at most. That practice helps the community to know who is who in it, and anti – social elements can be easily identified and weeded out.

For its part, the ZRP needs to liaise closely with its various publics, by which is meant people whose opinion about it (ZRP) if publicly expressed can either help or harm the ZRP.

Here we are concerned with the community in which the ZRP is based and in which it operates.

The ZRP should use its public relations personnel to sensitise communitie­s about their security. It is, of course, a matter of mutual concern to discuss community security measures, but that is primarily a ZRP responsibi­lity.

For example, informers are recruited by the ZRP and not by community members. A well organised police force has effective eyes and ears in the community it serves. That enables it to be pro – active instead of being reactive, that is to say it can prevent crimes being committed instead of always investigat­ing what has already occurred.

In a majority rule administra­tion, there is nothing wrong with the operations of informers. But in a minority or one – sided racialisti­c regime, the role of informers is, of course immoral unless they are serving the interests of the down trodden majority.

At Cowdray Park, the ZRP should be based among the community, so that it can act promptly whenever it is necessary. That necessity may be caused by a report or by a noise which may be a shout, a scream, a screech, an explosion, loud singing, wailing, crying, or whatever other type indicating that there is some unusual activity or action in the area.

It is most advisable that NWCs and the ZRP should submit every case they handle to law courts instead of counsellin­g and then releasing the party or parties concerned.

That should be the case particular­ly with all cases involving domestic disputes and violence. Matters of that nature usually involve passion, and ought to be subjected to profession­al legal considerat­ion.

Domestic violence cases should usually, if not always, be taken to the police after they have been repeatedly handled by neighbours, family members, elders, church leaders, headmen and/ or chiefs in the rural areas.

That is because there is always much more than meets the ordinary person’s ear in reports about domestic violence or disputes. The best way to deal with them is to hand them over to the courts.

Talking about courts brings us to a very, very important point, which is, decisions made by magistrate­s and/ or judges. Many convicted people are usually (and usually is the word) given either suspended sentences or community service.

No sooner do many of those so treated by our law courts walk out of the courts than commit much more serious crimes. This is especially so with cases involving domestic violence or disputes.

Even ordinary theft cases are generally treated leniently as accused persons are released for a song and go back to more or less fearlessly and sometimes boastfully commit worse crimes.

It is because of the way some courts treat some cases brought to them that communitie­s decide to take some incidents into their own hands, resulting in the deaths of such suspects as Prince Dube.

The national fight against crime cannot succeed if court sentences seem to show more sympathy towards the offender than towards the offended. This is a fundamenta­l truth utterly unnecessar­y to emphasise on this day and age in Zimbabwe.

Meanwhile, would – be criminals would be very well advised that it is virtually always true that “crime does not pay”.

A criminal is sooner or later caught and, all things being equal, ends up either in prison, or physically or mentally disabled by assaults by aggrieved people, or are socially ostracised by the community.

Prince Dube’s death was a sad end to a man that could have tilled the land and produced more than enough for himself, his family and the nation at large, especially during this season with its current plentiful rain.

Instead of stealing, how useful and honourable it would be for all able – bodied Zimbabwean­s who are not formerly employed to take up hoes, mattocks, rakes and whatever other tools and till the soil!

Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu is a retired, Bulawayo - based journalist. He can be contacted on cell 0734 328 136 or through email. sgwakuba@gmail.com

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