Minister Cele misses opportunity to admit that devolution of SAPS is needed
15 September 2022
Today, National Minister of Police, Bheki Cele, for the period of 1 April 2022 – 11 September 2002, presented, on what he terms “an update on the crime situation in the Western Cape.” Minister Cele highlighted the crime statistics on a few matters, which include that Nyanga is the number 1 SAPS station in the country for contact crimes and that between 5 and 11 September, 83 people were killed in the province.
What the Minister fails to mention is that since the intervention of the Law Enforcement Advancement Plan (LEAP) officers in Nyanga, where there are currently 73 officers deployed, it is no longer the murder capital of the country. In addition to this, the Minister is admitting how he has failed to ensure that the area is capacitated with the relevant and necessary resources to combat the crimes he is referring to.
The primary purpose of LEAP, which stems from the Western Cape Government’s Safety Plan is to reduce the murder rate in the areas where they are deployed, and half the murder rate across the province by 50% by 2029. The Western Cape Government and City of Cape Town work in partnership to deliver LEAP.
LEAP’s deployment is data-led, evidence based and where the need is greatest. This means there are no skewed allocations as with the SAPS deployment. Between 4 April 2022 – 28 August 2022, their deployment has led to 2 500 arrests for various crimes. Amongst others, these include the possession of illegal firearms, ammunition, dangerous weapons and drugs.