Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

You’re crying at the wrong funeral – Cele tells CT mayor

- VELANI LUDIDI velani.ludidi@inl.co.za

POLICE minister Bheki Cele has told Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis to stop crying at the wrong funeral.

It follows Hill-Lewis’s announceme­nt that he will fight tooth and nail to ensure the City has full power over the police.

The mayor was addressing a council meeting on Thursday.

He said he wrote a letter to the police minister to say that he was using his constituti­onal right to give the City more policing powers.

“Cele has previously said that he cannot devolve power in the absence of a constituti­onal amendment.

“This is nonsense. Section 99 of the Constituti­on provides that ‘a Cabinet member may assign any power or function… to a municipal council’.”

Cele said he wouldn’t entertain the mayor’s request as it should have not been sent to his office.

“I have been raising this issue. “Why is the mayor crying at the wrong funeral? The mayor is crying at the wrong funeral. I have nothing to do with the devolution of power; that is a constituti­onal matter.

“If they want anything out of it, they (must) rather write to the minister of justice who is responsibl­e for dealing with the Constituti­on.”

Cele went on to say the mayor had just arrived in governance and he didn’t understand it very well.

“What the mayor is saying is what is happening now. The municipal police, together with the animal (they) created here called law enforcemen­t; their operation and their work should be signed (off) by the provincial commission­er of what is happening now.

“That is not the devolution of power. It is operationa­l matters that are allowed to happen. The powers of policing are constituti­onal matters.

“The mayor must learn to separate those matters.”

The DA nationally has been calling for the firing of the minister, something, President Cyril Ramaphosa has not responded to.

Ramaphosa on Tuesday pledged to re-organise and strengthen law enforcemen­t capacity across the board.

Hill-Lewis said: “With greater police powers granted by Cele, we can help Ramaphosa achieve his goal. Let me be absolutely clear about what we want:

“We want our own, fully-fledged City police force with all the powers it needs to drasticall­y reduce crime in Cape Town.

“And, if the minister is not prepared to give us the powers we seek, we will fight tooth and nail to get them.

“We owe it to the millions of people in this City who live in fear.”

The minister was heavily criticised for the choice of words he used for saying a 19-year-old woman who was raped along with seven other women in Krugersdor­p West Village was “lucky” to have been raped by one man, as opposed to several men

Western Cape Premier Alan Winde has also been calling for the devolution of policing powers to the provincial government.

Cape Town continues to be a city of contradict­ions. It is hailed worldwide as one of the most beautiful cities and a tourist destinatio­n.

On the other hand, it also features in the top 10 of the most murderous cities in the world along with cities in Mexico.

The DA believes that the city can be made safer only if Cele is let go from his position and/or they are given more powers to have control over the police. DA provincial leader Tertuis Simmers said they strongly supported the mayor.

“South Africans are living in fear as violent acts of crime increase and criminals are not brought to book due to a deficient criminal justice system.

“Cele is failing to do his job and Western Cape residents should not bear the burden of his incompeten­ce.”

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