The Mercury

A lifetime of violent crime read out in court

We ignore the plight of black youths – the victims of violence, poverty and hopelessne­ss – at our own peril

- Francesca Villette

CONVICTED Cape Town 28s gang boss George “Geweld” Thomas was 9 when he was found guilty of housebreak­ing and theft, has 21 prior conviction­s and has spent half his life in prison.

In a heavily guarded courtroom at the Western Cape High Court yesterday, sentencing procedures started after Thomas was found guilty last week on 53 charges, including seven murders, three attempted murders and 10 counts of incitement of others to commit crimes. He stood in the dock with 16 others, who were also found guilty on scores of charges.

In aggravatio­n of sentence, State prosecutor advocate Willie Viljoen read out Thomas’s extensive sheet of conviction­s.

With a criminal record dating from 1975, Thomas, 49, agreed yesterday that he was a habitual criminal.

In 1975, when Thomas was 9 years old, he was convicted of housebreak­ing and theft. A sentence was not passed and he was advised to stay out of trouble. But he continued committing offences and in 1981, when 15, Thomas was referred to a reformator­y in Bishop Lavis. In that year he was found guilty of robbery.

He went on to commit more than 20 crimes, for all of which he was convicted.

They include murder, assault, theft, robbery and being in possession of drugs.

Thomas has spent 24 of his 48 years behind bars.

He and his co-accused, tried under the Prevention of Organised Crime Act, had faced 166 charges including murder and racketeeri­ng. The trial, which began in 2011, was the biggest case involving gangsters in the Western Cape, and the State called more than 70 witnesses.

Initially 19 people were on trial, but charges against Fred Williams were dropped because witnesses would not testify against him.

One of the accused, Jason Stynder, was found not guilty.

It took Judge Chantal Fortuin two weeks to deliver her 800page judgment. Sentencing procedures are expected to continue today.

LAST week, a relative called me to see if I could help a younger relative, a teenage girl, find a mentor for her “Take a girl child to work day”.

In the same week Cape Town gangster George “Geweld” Thomas was convicted of 53 charges including murder, racketeeri­ng and theft, some of the offences including the murders, having been committed while he was already in prison awaiting trial.

Around the same time, two of the four young men accused of killing Mozambican national Emmanuel Josias (also known as Sithole) were denied bail.

At face value the three incidents were unrelated yet they are part of the same narrative.

I have written before that it pains me that South Africa ignores the plight of its young black males. We hope they will sort themselves out, which is why we have a day dedicated to showing young girls that a different world exists, but hardly anything of the same magnitude for their brothers.

Many of the boys who we assume have the future figured out, for no other reason than that they are boys, grow up to be Geweld (meaning “violence”) or the Alex youngsters. Let me hasten to say that I do support the principle of exposing girls to possibilit­ies that exist.

Patriarchy is too entrenched in South Africa to not recognise that many young women have been raised to think, and still believe, their role in life is to be subservien­t to men.

I just believe they ignore the reality that in South Africa historical marginalis­ation by class and race is as real as keeping some on the peripherie­s on account of their sex.

Geweld and those Alexandra youngsters have more in common than even they probably appreciate.

They were all raised in poor communitie­s where violence is the norm and where the majority of victims of this violence looked like them. They are part of an unending cycle where the few positive male role model figures are judged by the consumable­s their cash can buy them.

The pictures of Geweld and his gang published in the media showed the group as enjoying their moment in the sun with some making the “8” sign to emphasise their membership of the 28s gang that operates both inside and outside prison.

Their lives epitomise the tragedy of being black, male and poor in a country where being all of these means life’s dance is pitted against you.

I get the impression we avoid peeping into the world which created them because we fear we might be accused of trying to justify their dastardly acts.

Unfortunat­ely, to minimise the emergence of another Geweld, we have to understand the streets that made them.

We have to understand what it is about a community that makes young men merrily stab another in full view of others, regardless of whether it was robbery or a xenophobic attack.

I am afraid we will continue to produce figures like Geweld and Sithole’s killers because we have accepted the plight of our young men as ordained from up high and poverty and hopelessne­ss as standard. It seems to be the popular view that if we no longer had communitie­s such as the one where Geweld and the Alex boys grew up, we would no longer have “authentici­ty”.

Whoever said “keep it real” had no love for those whose reality is the violence and easy death witnessed by residents of Bishop Lavis and Alex for generation­s.

Many feminists will argue that being a woman under the same situations is far worse. I beg to differ.

The majority, if not all of Geweld’s victims, were young black males.

One of the reasons the likes of

Whoever said, ‘Keep it real’ had no love for those whose reality is violence and death

Geweld continue to exist is that we have normalised poverty and lack of opportunit­ies for the majority of our youth. Many of us say with displaced pride that we grew up in rough neighbourh­oods.

One does not need to go to a museum or to see a statue to be reminded of the extent of apartheid’s impact on its victims. You only need to take a walk around any township.

We can jail as many like Geweld as we want. He was convicted along with 17 members of his gang. But that has not solved the problem of gangs and crime on the Cape Flats.

Mothers will continue to hope and pray their sons are not seduced by the world of violence and youthful corpses. The same applies to Sithole’s killers.

We can jail and condemn the Alex boys as much as we like. But unless we are honest with how the gender-race-class nexus in this country creates individual­s like Geweld and Sithole’s killers, we will continue treating the symptoms and calling the jailing of such figures “justice”, when it is mere retributio­n.

Come next Thursday, May 28, South Africa celebrates the 13th Take A Girl Child To Work Day. We should warn them to be on the lookout for those like Geweld and the Alexandra boys with unresolved social issues waiting to prey on them and on all of us.

 ?? PICTURE: BRENTON GEACH ?? George ‘Geweld’ Thomas was convicted of his first crime when he was 9 years old.
PICTURE: BRENTON GEACH George ‘Geweld’ Thomas was convicted of his first crime when he was 9 years old.
 ??  ?? Fikile-Ntsikelelo Moya
Fikile-Ntsikelelo Moya

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa