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Food hampers, solar panels looted from trucks

- MONISHKA GOVENDER and CHARLENE SOMDUTH

IN SEPARATE incidents two trucks were looted in the past week, one carrying food hampers and the other transporti­ng solar panels.

On Saturday a truck was looted on the N2, M25 interchang­e.

A 47-second viral video clip shows hundreds of people crowding around the truck and looting its contents – grabbing as many hamper buckets as they could before making off. In the process hundreds of hampers were also damaged and wasted.

Boysie Zungu, metro police spokespers­on, said: “People looted before the arrival of the police.

“However, they were chased by the SAPS and metro police and the situation came under control.”

On Monday, a group of people attempted to loot solar panels from an overturned truck on the Umgeni Road interchang­e next to the N2 highway.

Constable Thenjiswa Ngcobo, a provincial police spokespers­on, told IOL news, that a few people allegedly started looting the truck but when the SAPS and metro police arrived quickly at the scene, the crowd dispersed. No case was opened.

Mary de Haas, a violence monitor, said the looting could be opportunis­tic or a reflection of poverty. But what was important was that much crime stemmed from organised crime, as people stole to, for example, feed drug habits.

“There is also a criminal informal sector system circulatin­g stolen goods which may be at work. But there have been many examples of similar looting of broken-down trucks which will be fuelled by poverty, and even grabbing stuff to sell.

“Poverty does not cause crime, but needing food obviously facilitate­s it. Poverty does, however, make people recruitabl­e to criminal networks in order to make a living.”

She said this was not a new phenomenon and was likely to continue when delivery trucks break down.

Gareth Newham, a researcher from the Institute of Security Studies, said the looting of hampers appears to be opportunis­tic given that the truck had broken down.

“While poverty can be one of a number of factors that contribute­s to certain types of crime occurring, most poor people do not commit crime.”

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