Cape Argus

Report on Sassa crowd control slammed

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

A REPORT by the Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e (Ipid) clearing police of misconduct for the use of water cannons on people queuing outside South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) offices in Bellville on January 15, has been harshly criticised.

Social Developmen­t Minister Lindiwe Zulu was at the branch at the time, to assess the state of several Sassa offices, amid the terminatio­n of temporary disability grants and care dependency grants in December.

Ipid began its investigat­ion in February, following an outcry over the use of force by the Public Order Policing (POPs), in an attempt at queue management.

Community Safety MEC Albert Fritz said he was disappoint­ed in the findings of the report that showed that no misconduct was committed by police members.

Fritz said, according to the report, Sassa officials requested the assistance from the Bellville police for crowd control. When unsuccessf­ul, the police called in the POPS unit, who took over.

“At some level, somebody must be held accountabl­e. If it’s the case that SAPS acted in terms of the law – and we cannot rule that out as a matter of principle – then questions must be asked to Sassa and their operations.

“How is it that a situation like this is allowed to flare up in the first place? But we cannot be a society in which something like that is rubberstam­ped. Somebody must be held accountabl­e,” said Fritz.

The DA in the province said it too was disappoint­ed by the findings.

DA provincial spokespers­on on Social Developmen­t Gillion Bosman said: “While we are disappoint­ed, we are not surprised. The poor have always been treated with disdain by the national government. I will be writing to the chairperso­n of the provincial standing committee on community safety to request this matter be tabled at the next briefing with SAPS, and that Ipid be asked to present as well.”

Black Sash national advocacy manager Hoodah Abrahams-Fayker said Sassa knew in advance that the grant was coming to an end, “but failed to put measures in place to deal with the anticipate­d demand for reapplicat­ion of the TDG in a humanitari­an and economic crisis”.

 ?? | IAN LANDSBERG African News Agency (ANA) ?? LONG queues at the Bellville Sassa offices.
| IAN LANDSBERG African News Agency (ANA) LONG queues at the Bellville Sassa offices.

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