NEWS & ANALYSIS

Alexandra police force is far too small, inquiry hears

There is only one police officer per every 730 residents in township, SAPS discloses

Alexandra police force is far too small, inquiry hears

There is about one police officer per every 730 residents in Alexandra, according to Gauteng South African Police Service (SAPS) Commissioner Elias Mawela.

This is well below the national standard for police-to-community ratio, and the ratio recommended by the United Nations (UN), GroundUp reports.

Mawela was speaking at the inquiry into Alexandra by the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) and the Public Protector’s office on Tuesday. This was the third sitting of the inquiry.

The inquiry follows a spate of protests in April. Its purpose is to consider some of the issues raised during protests, such as the lack of housing, water, sanitation, and overcrowding in the township. The inquiry will also look into allegations of corruption in the Alexandra Renewal Project (ARP) — a project initially worth R1.3bn, launched in 2001 to develop Alexandra.

The UN’s recommended policing ratio is one police officer to 288 residents, but South Africa was currently averaging one officer to 348 residents, Mawela told the panel. Based on a census in 2014, he said there were about 177 000 residents in Alexandra and 243 police officers operating in the area. (The 2011 census gives the population of Alexandra as nearly 180 000. Unless there has been an exodus from the township, by GroundUp’s estimate the population would have grown to roughly 205 000 or 215 000 in 2019.)

Only one police station

"We are not even close to the national or the UN ratio… but that doesn’t mean that we are unable to render the basic policing services to the community of Alexandra," Mawela said.

Senior legal officer on the panel, Alexandra Fitzgerald, urged SAPS to look for the latest population statistics in Alexandra, "because some have even put it at 500 000, which may mean you are further away from the UN and national standard ratio than you think". (It is extremely unlikely that Alexandra’s population is as high as 500 000.)

Mawela said the station resource allocation was calculated using an efficiency index which largely depended on population size. In Alexandra, he said they "currently do not have what we want". He said the station should have at least 70 more staff members than it currently has.

The station commander of Alexandra police station, Johannes Tau, told the panel that there was only one police station servicing the whole township.

But Mawela said, in the last financial year, despite being underresourced, the Alexandra police station had managed to remove itself from the top 40 police stations with the most serious crime statistics.

'Alexandra is not lawless'

But Fitzgerald asked: "Underreporting [of crime] is a problem in the country and, on our visits to Alexandra, a lot of residents said they had no trust in SAPS, so how much of those statistics can you say is a result of distrust between the community and the police?"

"I can’t say that it doesn’t play a role in the statistics, but there is nothing we can do about that except encourage the community to report crimes and work with the police," answered Mawela.

He denied that there was complete lawlessness in Alexandra, as others had alleged in their submissions to the inquiry.

"Many people go about doing their day-to-day activities… There are many law-abiding citizens in Alex… Crime is happening all over the country and in Alex as well, but to reduce it to lawlessness is unfair," he said.

"Maybe they have a different definition of lawlessness, but from our side, Alexandra is not lawless."The inquiry continues on Wednesday.

GroundUp