Las Vegas Review-Journal

S. Africa uses new technology to fight gun violence

‘Shotspotte­r’ also used to track down poachers

- By Neil Shaw The Associated Press

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — As gunshots ring out in one of South Africa’s most dangerous neighborho­ods, a new technology detects the gun’s location and immediatel­y alerts police.

South Africa is the first country outside the United States to implement the “shotspotte­r” audio technology, which is also being used to fight wildlife poaching on the other end of the country in Kruger National Park.

The technology’s use in Cape Town’s notoriousl­y violent Cape Flats area has contribute­d for the first time this year to a conviction in a gang shooting. Police hope more will follow.

“About 13 percent of gunshots are reported by the public. Now we respond to every single incident, very rapidly,” said City of Cape Town Alderman J.P. Smith, who instituted the technology in the Manenberg and Hanover Park neighborho­ods in 2016. “It’s accurate to between 2 meters and 10 meters (6 feet to 33 feet) of where the shot was fired.”

The recovery of illegal guns has jumped fivefold in the areas where the shotspotte­r is used, Smith said. The technology also provides accurate data about gun violence.

The technology operates by acoustic sensors which are placed throughout a neighborho­od and Cape Town plans to expand its use from the current 3 square miles to 7 square miles.

South Africa has one of the highest rates of murder in the world. On Tuesday, police announced that the rate was up about 7 percent, with 20,336 people killed between April 2017 and March, compared

with 19,016 in the previous year. Many were linked to gang violence in Western Cape province, whose capital is Cape Town.

The national homicide rate of 34 per 100,000 people spikes in parts of the Cape Flats to up to 250 per 100,000, according to the University of Cape Town.

“The Cape Flats violence has its roots in apartheid policy,” said Simon Howell of the nonprofit African Policing Civilian Oversight Forum. “When colored people (South African term for people of mixed race) were forcibly evicted from their areas and dumped in the Cape Flats, people lost all their social ties that used to form an identity.”

Gangs evolved from that treatment of the mixed-race population during white-minority rule, say experts.

“Violence begets violence,” said University of Cape Town criminolog­ist Guy Lamb. “Since 1994 we’ve had high levels of unemployme­nt, poverty, inequality, and these dynamics have fed into the high violent crime rate.”

 ?? Nasief Manie ?? The Associated Press South Africa is the first country outside the United States to implement the “shotspotte­r” audio technology to fight against known gun violence in neighborho­ods such as in Mannenburg, Cape Town.
Nasief Manie The Associated Press South Africa is the first country outside the United States to implement the “shotspotte­r” audio technology to fight against known gun violence in neighborho­ods such as in Mannenburg, Cape Town.

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