Cape Argus

Municipali­ties face crime-fighting issues

- MTHUTHUZEL­I NTSEKU mthuthuzel­i.ntseku@inl.co.za

ALTHOUGH South Africa’s municipali­ties have a safety mandate, they face capacity constraint­s and other challenges in preventing crime by law enforcemen­t.

This was one of the findings contained in a preliminar­y report recently released by the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) in co-operation with the SA Local Government Associatio­n (Salga) on the state of local government law enforcemen­t and how municipali­ties can raise their crime-fighting profiles.

This report, which focused on the law enforcemen­t powers, capacities and challenges of local government, explores critical issues that local government­s must address to strengthen their responses to safety challenges.

The reports noted the constraint­s in by-laws, their developmen­t, training and human resources developmen­t, police and National Prosecutin­g Authority approach to traffic and by-law violations, including municipal courts in enforcing traffic laws and by-laws in municipali­ties.

Ugeshni Naidoo, Salga’s senior manager for community safety and asset protection, said many municipali­ties do not have effective by-laws, while those that have them, don’t have the required capacity to enforce them.

She said this was a challenge on how municipali­ties created an environmen­t that fostered economic and social developmen­t of communitie­s.

Senior consultant at ISS and report co-author David Bruse said there was a need for better informatio­n and understand­ing at the local level regarding challenges to safety and how law enforcemen­t can best support it.

He said there was also a need for a commitment to coherent policy in order to support municipali­ties’ ability to optimise their contributi­on to law enforcemen­t and safety.

The report recommende­d, among others, a greater emphasis on co-operation between law enforcemen­t agencies and service delivery department­s in metros and other local government­s, as well as training of metro police and law enforcemen­t officials and people responsibl­e for overseeing by-laws to understand social contexts.

It also recommende­d an analysis to strengthen an understand­ing about how by-laws and by-law enforcemen­t can most contribute to violence prevention and safety.

Salga portfolio head Nozibele Makanda said the associatio­n would continue making the collaborat­ion with police for the support of municipali­ties by strengthen­ing crime prevention and response efforts.

Makanda said Salga would further work to lobby to have all municipali­ties establish at least three basic units within community safety such as traffic management and parking, by-law enforcemen­t or compliance and infrastruc­ture protection.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa