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NEWS
Murder in SA - 52 a day
M&G, 17 April 2006 DA: 'How many more people
have to be murdered?'
Johannesburg, South Africa
17 April 2006 09:31, Mail and Guardian online
The South African government needs to wake up to the
reality and brutality of crime, the Democratic Alliance said on Sunday.
The opposition party's call came after Afrikaans newspaper Rapport, said
that 52 people are killed daily, 1 566 per month and 18 793 annually in
South Africa.
"How many more people have to be murdered, raped, assaulted, robbed and
tortured before the ANC government will wake up to the enormity and the
sheer brutality of the problem?" DA spokesperson on safety and security
Roy Jankielsohn said in a statement.
According to the paper, the SA Human Rights Commission was of the
opinion that the country's Constitution was in danger of becoming
meaningless as an individual's right to life was not being respected.
Jankielsohn said the media had reported incidents where South Africans
had fallen victims to criminals, but the government had not acted to
prevent such incidents.
"Gang violence in the Western Cape has claimed more lives, a well-known
movie and television director was shot and killed in Gauteng."
Television director Ken Kirsten (58) was gunned down in the driveway of
his Northcliff, Johannesburg, home last Sunday. Gang violence in the
Western Cape had claimed the lives of seven people in the past two
weeks, according to Rapport.
He said what was disturbing was that police were also afraid of these
criminals.
Jankielsohn said according to Safety and Security Minister Charles
Nqakula, not all the posts at the forensic science laboratories and at
the crime record centres were filled.
The situation was worsened by the severe staff shortages in the South
African Police Service, especially of detectives, in a number of
provinces, Jankielsohn said.
"South Africans deserve to see a crime-fighting team that is properly
staffed and resourced to prevent crime from taking place, and to catch
and punish those who break the law."
He said there were criminals who were allowed to walk the streets
because there was no space for them in prisons or were given inadequate
sentences.
"Once a criminal has been apprehended and convicted, we need to put them
behind bars." - Sapa
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