The Star Late Edition

Onus on malls to ensure our safety

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SHOPPERS this week watched in horror as a man was gunned down by another motorist in a Pretoria shopping centre’s parking lot.

The attack left many asking if shopping malls were safe.

This incident at Menlyn Maine is not an isolated one. It is part of many violent scenes that have been playing out for years, including cash heists and armed robberies that have caused pandemoniu­m as shoppers scatter in terror as shots are fired.

The festive season is upon us. It is during this time of year that families and their young children set about to buy gifts for their loved ones.

It is the responsibi­lity of shopping centre management to not only lure them in for the specials on merchandis­e but also run campaigns on safety and reassure consumers that their shopping experience will be a good one.

They need to stop shirking their responsibi­lity by telling consumers, through plaques, that “they will not assume responsibi­lity for any incident that happens inside the shopping mall”.

It is not enough that a handful of security guards are placed at the entrances.

What is more disconcert­ing is that while shopping centre management­s put evacuation mechanisms in place, consumers do not immediatel­y know where to go when disaster strikes. This is because none of the warnings are highlighte­d prominentl­y so that they can easily find an escape route.

How does a family aid a slow, elderly person or a person in a wheelchair? How do these people reach evacuation doors when they are told not to use the lift in case of a fire, yet it is the only available platform for them to use to manoeuvre around the mall?

In an article published almost 17 years ago, Dr Bennie Coetzer, the managing director of Thales Advanced Engineerin­g responsibl­e for electronic surveillan­ce systems, put it ever so eloquently when he said people do not shop where they do not feel safe.

Security, safety and crime prevention are therefore critical elements for property developers and management in the design, constructi­on and administra­tion of modern shopping centres.

Coetzer said tenants and visitors at shopping centres needed to see that security and crime prevention were a priority for management.

Shopping centre owners need to start pulling their socks up. As consumers, we deserve better.

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