Let's be frank. After Wednesday's parliamentary portfolio committee meeting on the South African Police Services, the all-round confidence here at the Mahogany Ridge in our thinning blue line's ability to uphold law and order has slipped a teeny, weeny bit.
The figures are grim. In the last financial year, 1 165 service weapons were lost -- yet only 300 officers have been charged for their disappearance. It also emerged that more than 20 000 of them were incompetent in handling the firearms they somehow failed to lose.
In the last five years, more than 13 500 firearms were lost. Less than one percent of the officers responsible for this negligence have been disciplined or ordered to pay for their missing weapons.
"Nobody is being held accountable," was how the Democratic Alliance's police spokeswoman, Dianne Kohler Barnard, put it. "Firearms are hugely expensive. I can understand if a police officer has a gun held to their head, they would not be held responsible. But there have been suspicions voiced that SAPS members are selling them to supplement their income."
It's not unreasonable to suggest that this slackness played a substantial role in the R20-billion contingent liability in the SAPS, an amount that has quadrupled in the last five years. Of that sum, about R14.8-billion is civil claims by private individuals against the police.
Deaths in police detention have increased significantly in this time, as have deaths as a result of police action and the number of assault complaints against the police.