POLICE AT PORTS OF ENTRIES ARE NOT A LAW UNTO THEMSELVES - WARNS MINISTER MTHETHWA
Clean-up campaign of ‘tsotsi-cop' to ensure those tasked to guard borders guard by good example
PRETORIA - 15 December 2010. Members of the South African Police Service (SAPS) who are stationed at the country's various ports of entries, will not be immune to prosecution or be treated with ‘kid gloves' when it comes to upholding the law. In fact no police officer, irrespective of where they are stationed, is a law unto him or herself. This is an affirmation made by the Minister of Police, Nathi Mthethwa as part of the police leadership's determination to eradicate any form of corruption, fraud or ill-discipline within the Force.
Police officers stationed at ports of entries include those at harbours, borderline and various entry points adjoining our neighbouring countries, namely Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Swaziland, Botswana, Namibia and Zambia. In a Parliamentary reply submitted today, Minister Mthethwa pointed out that 44 SAPS officials had been investigated at ports of entries in the 2009/2010 financial year for various criminal charges and were additionally charged via the SAPS internal disciplinary procedures.
The internal SAPS disciplinary processes are not linked to the criminal processes which are the domain of the courts. However, in seriously tackling the issue of corruption by police officers, the Minister has requested that follow-ups be made with the relevant investigation departments for progress and monitoring until finalization thereof. He has also tasked the Civilian Secretariat of Police to monitor the cases and provide him with a full report in due course. "By virtue of being stationed at these ports of entries, it does not make these members unique as such we shall continuously keep our oversight on them. They are part of the Force and must at all material times conduct themselves in a disciplined and exemplary manner."
He highlighted that some of these officials were dismissed from the service after having been convicted of amongst others corruption, assault, fraud, drug possession, theft and/or murder. "The majority of those cases have been finalized with convictions and in some cases no disciplinary steps could be taken as such members resigned before the case could be finalized. In three cases the members left the force before finalization and two cases are yet to be finalized. In twenty four cases the members were found guilty during disciplinary hearing and internal sanctions imposed."