Saturday Star

Inept Bheki Cele is unfit for his job

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BHEKI Cele’s ministry has spent

R2.8 billion – being put up in hotels, being entertaine­d and entertaini­ng and being catered for and catering – since he was appointed police minister in 2019.

You can’t help but think what else has happened since 2019: a draconian lockdown against the spread of Covid-19 which did less to curb the spread of infection and more to cause the rise of genderbase­d violence behind closed doors and a booming trade in illicit cigarettes and booze. The police enforced all of that, including chasing people off deserted beaches.

During the July insurrecti­on last year, the police literally stood by as thousands of people plundered shopping malls and distributi­on centres in Kwazulu-natal and Gauteng. They did nothing to stop them. Apparently, they didn’t even know it was going to happen.

That’s without looking at all the myriad crises that haven’t made the front-page news but have catastroph­ically affected families by the police’s sometimes unwillingn­ess and general inability.

Throughout all of this, we have had to endure the exponentia­l growth in our police minister’s insensitiv­ity, thin skin and overweenin­g sense of self-worth and entitlemen­t.

There is literally barely a week that goes by without Cele becoming the news because he simply cannot help himself from shouting his mouth off with another crass or craven sound bite that, in most cases, is at the expense of the victims themselves.

As we remember the 10th anniversar­y of the Marikana massacre, the worst human rights incident in post-apartheid history, which was perpetrate­d by the same South African Police “Service”; as we buckle under the unpreceden­ted spiralling cost of living and as we fight crime on our own – there is only one question.

How long can we afford, literally, to keep on indulging a political leader who is so obviously out of his depth and unfit for the job at hand?

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