NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

400 cops, soldiers descend on Beitbridge

- BY REX MPHISA l Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

THE Zimbabwe Republic Police and the Zimbabwe National Army have deployed more than 400 officers from outside Beitbridge in a major clampdown that has seen hundreds of people arrested and fined in the border town.

The clampdown is mainly targeted at smugglers, illegal crossborde­r travellers and various other malcontent­s following a surge in criminal activity at the country’s busiest port of entry.

Local law enforcemen­t agents have been reduced to spectators amid allegation­s that they were complicit in most criminal activities recorded in the border town.

The military team is being led by a top army officer, while police officers are under one Assistant Commission­er J Simon.

National police spokespers­on Assistant Commission­er Paul Nyathi yesterday confirmed the heavy security deployment, but could not give further details.

“Any further detail will jeopardise our operations, suffice to say all people engaged in illicit deals must stop now,” he said.

Two choppers have been dispatched for the onslaught against the smugglers believed to have cost the country billions of dollars.

Illegal cross-border movement is also believed to have caused the spike in COVID-19 cases, which are now soaring daily.

The new arrivals brought in detectives, traffic police and all department­s within the police to set up their own station within a station and have their own stationary and are said to be taking orders directly from Police General Headquarte­rs in Harare.

They have pitched their tents inside the Beitbridge Police Station, but do not seem to be connected to the local police.

News Day is reliably informed that the operation is a follow-up to a recent visit by the National Joint Operations Command (JOC) which vowed to clean up Beitbridge.

JOC met in Beitbridge on December 11 and pledged to beef up borderline security to control rampant smuggling of goods and irregular migration which peaks during the festive season.

“This developmen­t could be in line with that. Government may have also been embarrasse­d by the recent accusation­s by South African Home Affairs minister Aaron Motsoaledi, who said Zimbabwean police and army officers were corrupt and facilitate­d border jumping,” a source said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe