Saturday Star

Kidnapping statistics show an alarming spike in Gauteng

- SHAUN SMILLIE shaun.smillie@inl.co.za

AN EMPLOYEE at a butchery and vegetable shop in Rosettenvi­lle was returned to his family unharmed after his kidnappers got away with a ransom payment.

Joao Avilino J Marqal Francisco ll ze Lemmer was released last Saturday after kidnappers held him for a week.

A family member said he was unharmed, but was not talking about the experience. Police have not commented on the incident.

This latest abduction came as Gauteng has experience­d a sharp rise in kidnapping­s over the last year.

The latest crime statistics for the period of April to June this year, compared to the same period last year, showed that there had been an increase of 186.6% in kidnapping­s in Gauteng. From April to June this year, there were 809 kidnapping­s.

Last year over the same period there were 282 kidnapping­s although the so-called “crime holiday” brought on by the Covid-19 lockdown may have lowered numbers.

The Rosettenvi­lle incident happened shortly after the employee left work from the butchery and vegetable shop on Main Street at 7pm.

Not far from the shop, a car stopped his truck, and the occupants then smashed the window and abducted him.

His family was contacted and a ransom was demanded. After negotiatio­ns, he was released.

It is understood that a ransom was paid, but there were no arrests.

The amount paid has not been revealed.

Senior researcher at the Institute for Security Studies Martin Ewi said that the number of kidnapping­s in the country was under-reported.

“This has always been the problem with kidnapping, it only gets recorded when it is reported. Often they kidnap you, tell your family not to talk to the police, and the family ends up not talking to the police,” said Ewi.

To combat the rising numbers of kidnapping­s, Ewi said the police should establish a special task team to deal with the crime. He said that often the police who dealt with kidnapping­s had not been properly trained.

“We’ve seen instances where the family involved the police, the police didn't even know how to act, and the family member was killed,” he says.

Ewi added that police should assess which communitie­s were vulnerable to kidnapping, establish good relations with them, and be able to respond quickly when an incident happened.

He also said that there needed to be harsher penalties for kidnappers and those who supported them.

For a straight kidnapping charge, a kidnapper can get 15 years.

This week, however, police did have success in rescuing a kidnap victim in the North West.

The 30-year-old Gauteng woman was released unharmed when police raided a shack in Kgabaletsa­ne near Klipgat.

On Tuesday, three men posing as police officers allegedly kidnapped the woman from her home in Atteridgev­ille, Gauteng. Her kidnappers contacted her brother and demanded a ransom.

A team – that comprised detectives, tactical response units, and hostage negotiator­s – was able to locate where the woman was being held.

Just after midnight on Wednesday police found the woman and arrested a 27-year-old man.

Police are currently hunting the other suspects linked to the incident.

This has always been the problem with kidnapping, it only gets recorded when it is reported... the family ends up not

talking to the police

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