Sunday Tribune

MARY DE HAAS: POLICE CLEAN UP IS LONG OVERDUE

- MARY DE HASS dkuebeansh.cinhe.tthya@ningla.cvoe.lzoa@inl.co.za www.iol.co.za @kubenchett­y Kuben Chetty KUBEN CHETTY

SATURATION media coverage of the stand-off between the SAPS and Nkandla crowds ignoring lockdown regulation­s raise questions about double standards in imposing sanctions.

There were good reasons for that initial SAPS inaction, but there is cause for concern about the way in which Covid-19 regulation­s have been implemente­d since March last year, exacerbate­d by the promulgati­on of new, unnecessar­ily draconian, criminal offences during the current level 4 lockdown.

Although the Nkandla gathering was a super-spreader, attempts by the SAPS to arrest people would probably have led to a blood-bath, given the climate of incitement by well-armed Jacob Zuma supporters. The SAPS reportedly has images and video footage, so the immediate imperative is to arrest all leaders and organisers of the gathering, and travelling from Gauteng, and inciting and firing guns (a criminal offence). By the July 7 arrest deadline well-trained SAPS members from around the country were prepared for any eventualit­y, but thankfully Zuma left the complex in the nick of time, averting likely bloodshed had he and his supporters resisted.

The response required of the police at Nkandla was necessaril­y different to that in routine enforcemen­t of lockdown regulation­s.

Since March 2020 abuse of the powers given to the security forces has been rife, and unnecessar­y. It has ranged from arrest for trivial offences like walking on beaches to killings.

Although alcohol was banned the black market flourished, often with police complicity. There have been extremely high levels of abuse by the police, including torture and killings, for many years (peaking during “shoot to kill” years), so it was a foregone conclusion that those inclined to this type of conduct (many are not) would relish their increased powers.

In May last year the SAPS national commission­er, in an attempt to stem abuse, sent a detailed circular to all SAPS members, through management structures, warning against the use of force and torture, and detailing procedures for implementi­ng and enforcing the regulation­s and directives of the Disaster Management Act.

Commanders had to ensure all members were regularly cautioned against any unnecessar­y violence, and warned that any inhumane treatment or punishment, or excessive use of force or torture, would be dealt with in terms of criminal law and SAPS disciplina­ry processes.

Specific details were given about arresting procedures, together with reminders of circumstan­ces allowed for by the Criminal Procedure Act 1977 whereby even authorised arrests could be avoided. In such instances, police would work with prosecutor­s and magistrate­s, and ensure proper record keeping. Torture was condemned in the strongest terms as an extremely serious offence.

These explicit instructio­ns, and others such as those governing public order policing, have continued to be ignored, with serious, even lethal, consequenc­es. Since June 28, new regulation­s criminalis­e a range of lockdown offences, allowing rogue police to expand their abuse. One risks prison for leisure travel to and from Gauteng, attending or persuading others to attend gatherings, or even sitting down at a restaurant.

Such severe punishment is unnecessar­y and risks spreading Covid-19 through confinemen­t in a police van or prison cell. Alternativ­e procedures are detailed in the circular of May 2020, when more appropriat­e punishment­s such as fines or community service could be imposed by courts.

Gatherings still occur during service protests, and serious public order policing problems remain, as remedial actions suggested in the 2016 expert panel report following Marikana (only released by the minister in March) remain unaddresse­d, and public order policing discipline is often poor.

For example, rubber bullets may be used only in “extreme” conditions, yet their regular use continues, leading to

“More draconian forms of policing and punishment are no guarantee of a reduction in violent crime.” Ash Sarkar

deaths and serious injuries. Remedial tactics are urgent given the regularity of protest action. National SAPS commission­er directives are ignored with impunity because of the shocking state of management and discipline permitted during the Zuma years.

Far too many incompeten­t people were appointed, unnecessar­ily, to very senior positions, especially station and district. Serious abuses (torture, murder) must be investigat­ed by the Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e (Ipid), which, especially in KZN, is riddled with problems.

The clean-up of the police has started, with complaints promptly attended to, but it will take years to clear dead wood. Ipid needs to be far better resourced, but legislatio­n giving the directorat­e complete independen­ce under a board is overdue and urgent.

Action against injustice, including lockdown abuses, should start at community level or, in those many disempower­ed communitie­s, with outside support from rights defenders.

All Community Policing Forums should access copies of the May 2020 circular at their stations and assist the vulnerable they are supposed to represent. This circular explicitly encourages persons who have suffered “excessive use of force, inhumane treatment and punishment” to report it to the SAPS by opening cases, and assures the public they will be investigat­ed.

However, community structures will need to engage and monitor.

Finally, everyone who stands for democracy and constituti­onal values should take notice of – and call a halt to – the creeping authoritar­ianism facilitate­d by Covid-19 lockdowns, which now further facilitate police abuses.

 ??  ??
 ?? DOCTOR NGCOBO African News Agency (ANA) ?? TENSIONS ran high in Nkandla, Kwazulu-natal, since last week as former president Jacob Zuma’s supporters gathered in contravent­ion of the public gathering restrictio­ns imposed under the Covid-19 level 4 lockdown to protest against his imprisonme­nt. |
DOCTOR NGCOBO African News Agency (ANA) TENSIONS ran high in Nkandla, Kwazulu-natal, since last week as former president Jacob Zuma’s supporters gathered in contravent­ion of the public gathering restrictio­ns imposed under the Covid-19 level 4 lockdown to protest against his imprisonme­nt. |
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Honorary research fellow at the UKZN School of Law and a member of the Navi Pillay Research Group on justice and human rights.
Honorary research fellow at the UKZN School of Law and a member of the Navi Pillay Research Group on justice and human rights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa