Business Day

Cape Town murder rate still high despite army deployment

- Agency Staff /AFP

Waving and giggling, crowds of children scamper behind a Casspir military armoured truck trailed by police vehicles as they snake through the streets on a raid in the gang-ridden Cape Flats area.

A few blocks down the road, the rifle-brandishin­g forces hop off their vehicles and meander through lines of hanging laundry, before swooping in on a cluster of apartment buildings suspected to be crime hot spots.

SA deployed about 1,300 soldiers in July to shore up the police force that has been battling deadly gang violence ravaging the area.

The Cape Flats area comprises multiple townships where blacks and coloureds were condemned to live by the oppressive apartheid regime.

It has become one of the most dangerous places in SA,

plagued by gangsteris­m and under-resourced policing.

But a month after their deployment, the troops appear to have brought little relief for the crime-weary and povertystr­icken community.

“Everybody was elated when they heard the news that the army was going to come in because the situation was so dire that anything to improve the situation would have helped,” said Kader Jacobs, who heads a community policing forum in Manenberg township.

People had expected a rollout of large-scale lockdowns with specific targeting of wellknown criminal hot spots and gang leaders, but “there’s been none of this”.

“The people aren’t seeing any major changes or improvemen­ts in the area,” said the frustrated community leader.

Police statistics say murders in the Western Cape rose 6.3% to nearly 4,000 in the year up to April 2019.

MURDER RATES

A 2019 report on urban safety released by the South African Cities Network showed Cape Town recorded the highest murder rates in the country at 69 people killed per 100,000 — double the national average rate recorded in 2018.

“They send in the army but the army can’t do anything,” said 50-year-old Sally-Anne Jacobs, who lost both her son and 19year-old cousin to gang violence over the past four years.

“The army is here but I don’t know how far they can go to minimise the killings on the Cape Flats,” she said.

Bowing to pressure from local government, community and social organisati­ons after 43 murders were recorded in just one weekend in July, President Cyril Ramaphosa approved a temporary military deployment of three months.

Working with intelligen­ce gathered from community members and other sources, the military goes in and secures perimeters, allowing the police to raid homes and arrest suspects — at times evoking applause from neighbours.

But the number of killings has not reduced much.

Despite the army presence over the past month, 47 deaths were reported on the second weekend of August, making it the deadliest weekend since the infantry arrived.

Police minister Bheki Cele said while “it’s not an ideal world to send soldiers into communitie­s”, there have been more than 1,000 arrests so far for various crimes including attempted murder, robbery and hijackings.

In addition, police have seized 45 firearms and 1,036 rounds of ammunition.

Even with such mass arrests, the locals continue to live in fear and suspect many cases will not be thoroughly investigat­ed.

“Half of the detectives in the province have a caseload of 200 dockets or more, when the ideal number is between 50 and 60,” Western Cape premier Alan Winde said.

A social activist of the Manenberg Safety Forum charity, Roegchanda Pascoe, is also not impressed.

“From what I’ve seen, the army hasn’t done much. Minimal to nought impact has been measured. Two guns in the last operation were found out of the many artillery we know is out on the streets,” she said.

There is more to curbing crime than just a military show of force, says Pascoe.

‘SOCIAL FABRIC’

“The social fabric of our communitie­s has broken down entirely. We sit with broken families, with unemployme­nt, teenage pregnancy, drug and alcohol abuse.”

But the police minister says it is still “early days” of the operation as he warned gangsters that “your days are numbered”.

Costing the taxpayer $1.4m, the operationa­l expense “would be worth it if it led to a long-term disruption in violence”, said Andrew Faull, a researcher with the Institute of Security Studies, a Pretoria-based think-tank.

But so far the military deployment, according to Faull, is akin to “political theatre”.

“They are being seen to do things but they are just going through the motions. So it’s performati­ve politics.”

THE ARMY IS HERE BUT I DON’T KNOW HOW FAR THEY CAN GO TO MINIMISE THE KILLINGS ON THE CAPE FLATS

 ?? /AFP ?? Army aid: SANDF soldiers secure the perimeter of a police operation during a joint patrol with the South African police in the Cape Flats area in Cape Town.
/AFP Army aid: SANDF soldiers secure the perimeter of a police operation during a joint patrol with the South African police in the Cape Flats area in Cape Town.

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