City responds to COSATU's criticism of enforcement priorities
COSATU's absurd press release criticizing me for the Traffic Service's recent cell phone blitz once again points to a fundamental misunderstanding of the functions of local government and justifies calling for Mr Ehrenreich's resignation or dismissal.
As Mr Ehrenreich well knows, crime prevention and fighting gangs is the exclusive competency of national government. Every component of the criminal justice system is under their control: the SAPS, who have an exclusive investigative focus (Metro Police is not allowed to investigate crime and murder), the National Prosecuting Authority, the Department of Justice and the Department of Correctional Services.
In spite of this, the City has gone above and beyond its mandate to dedicate resources to fighting crime by establishing a Gang Unit as well as a Drug Unit (amongst others) to assist the SAPS in executing their duties. The City of Cape Town also piloted a project in 2013 to deploy School Resource Officers to six high-risk schools across the metropole and is in the process of finalising a plan for the further rollout of this initiative.
When gang violence erupted in Manenberg in August last year, it was the City and the Western Cape Government who joined forces to safeguard school children whose lives were put in danger as a result of the indiscriminate shooting incidents. The City's Metro Police maintained an extraordinary deployment in the area until the end of the school year - a deployment far outweighing the SAPS resources in the area, but at the expense of visible policing in other communities.
The City has gone further than any other city in South Africa in its fight against gangs and disrupting their criminal activities as they relate to drugs and illegal firearms. We work tirelessly to support the SAPS and other nationally mandated law enforcement agencies who are the key players in the fight against crime.