Cape Argus

Mission to make peace among gangs

- SHAKIRAH THEBUS shakirah.thebus@inl.co.za

THE Cape Coloured Congress (CCC) is on a mission to broker peace among gangs across the Cape Flats.

CCC interim presrdent Fadiel Adams said discussion­s with gangs started last week.

“We are seeing one gang per day. The talks are intensive and exhausting,” he said.

Four Mitchells Plain gangs have indicated they would attend the ceasefire meeting, with more from the Cape Flats intended to come on board.

“We engage the gangs to stop the shootings. We intend to offer the young gangsters alternativ­es such as work, skills developmen­t and entreprene­urial training. Previous ceasefires have failed because there weren’t any options offered to the kids,” Adams said.

He said that post-discussion­s, the CCC would act as a mediator in future gang disputes.

Reformed Parkwood gang leader Rashaad Allen said he supported CCCs efforts, but cautioned: “All gang leaders are CEOs of their own businesses.

From a little boy already I made decisions about people’s lives Rashaad Allen

REFORMED PARKWOOD GANG LEADER

“If gang leaders can manipulate human beings to believe in their doctrine or in their instructio­n, then surely that leader has the ability to lead, and if their leadership can be manipulate­d by something humanitari­an, then it can benefit the whole of mankind.”

He said leaders were accustomed to receiving large sums of money daily, and should be given options to earn an income to have them fully on board.

“From a little boy already I was a part of the top structure.

“I made decisions about people’s lives, about who is going to live or die, or who was going to go home to his wife with one eye.”

He asked where the psychologi­sts, councillor­s and social workers were for those who wished to reform. He said if change could occur at the top, it would filter down to the foot soldiers.

Allen spent 20 years and three months in prisons.

He was first imprisoned in 1988, at the age of 17. Upon his release in 1995, he said it took him two days to, among others, acquire guns and start recruiting members for armed robbery.

Today, Allen runs and facilitate­s a number of rehabilita­tive and developmen­t programmes, and a halfway house for people with criminal background­s or a history of drug use.

On whether gangsters could reform, he said: “I’m living proof that it is possible.”

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