My dear
friends and fellow South Africans,
The crime statistics published
last week, once again, underlines the truth of the
dictum "lies, damned lies, and statistics": part of
a phrase attributed to the 19th Century British
Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli, among others, and
later popularised in the United States by writers
like Mark Twain. As one would have expected, the
crime statistics are a real "mixed bag". "The crimes
you fear most are on the rise," was how one
newspaper put it.
House robberies: up 27% for the
year ending in March,
Business robberies: up 41%.
Sex crimes: up
10.1%.
Carjackings: up 5%.
As we prepare for FIFA, alas,
these scary statistics went around the world ending
up in publications like the Los Angeles Times. And
here's what some South Africans have been saying,
via the BBC website:
Andy in Johannesburg: "I don't
believe that the police have adequate training to
handle such authority and to make the correct
choices when faced with a threat."
Peter in Cape Town:
"Violent crime will not be ended by
redemptive violence but by adopting better solutions
to the causes of crime in this country: poverty,
racism, social injustice and the like."
Mathopa in Polokwane: "The
president is right.
The police must shoot at criminals to protect
law abiding citizens.
"As South Africa grapples with the
figures and indicators of the latest crime
statistics, we must not forget the ordinary men and
women behind the numbers. IFP spokesperson on
police, Velaphi Ndlovu, put it so well last week:
"In the end, every statistic in the document before
us reflects a deeply affected life in a deeply
affected society". "South Africans are being driven
further and further apart, afraid even to look each
other in the eye" he added.
A large part of the problem is that as the
apartheid-era police force was feared and
distrusted, now surveys indicate eroding confidence
in the contemporary force, due in part to corruption
and the frequent reluctance of police to act on
crime reports or visit crime scenes.
While I like President Jacob
Zuma's hands-on approach, his straight-talking does
sometimes evokes President Bush's cowboy rhetoric: "We're going to smoke
them out". Is it compelling and popular? Yes. Is it
sensible? No. President Zuma's permission to Police
Station Commanders this week to shoot to kill is
dangerous.
Until legislation is changed with
watertight safeguards, such direction from the
President could land police officers in hot water.
We have seen this many times in
some states in the US.
The IFP position is clear.
We recognise that more police
powers, while intrinsically is a good thing, creates
more room for corrupt practices. Therefore it is
imperative that a culture of discipline be
inculcated in our police force. Particularly in an
environment where illegal firearms are so easily
available, there is a danger that guns may be
planted on suspects after the fact. This why we
urged the President yesterday to acknowledge that it
is not just 'cops and robbers', as my colleague put
it, we
are dealing with, but human beings who must be
trained to exercise sound judgment and be held
accountable for their decisions.
We must have a police force that
is non-aligned, that takes policing decisions on
policing grounds and that protects people's rights
under the Constitution. We simply need a police that
would do its job. Such a police service must also be
better resourced.
Yours sincerely,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, MP