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STATISTICS
Stats: 2003 SA crime stats
CRIMESTATS by Jacques Keet
PARLIAMENT Sept 22 Sapa
SAPS WINNING CRIME WAR, SAYS SELEBI
The SA Police Service has made great
strides in reducing serious crime levels, although certain categories of
crime have increased, National Commissioner Jackie Selebi said on Monday.
Briefing the media on the SAPS annual report for 2002/03 -- tabled in
Parliament on Monday -- he said murders dropped by 1.3 percent during the
period under review, and rape by 5.3 percent. Since 1994, the incidence of
murder had now dropped by 29.5 percent, Selebi said.
The report covers the financial year April 1, 2002, to March 31 this year.
According to the report, almost two-thirds of all murders committed in South
Africa last year occurred in only one-third of the country's nine provinces:
KwaZulu-Natal, Gauteng and the Western Cape.
The document, which gives no absolute
figures, only ratios, states there were 47,4 murders per 100,000 of the
country's population during 2002/03, compared to 48,0 per 100,000 during
2001/02.
"A majority of 65 percent of all murders occurred in only three provinces,
namely KwaZulu-Natal (25 percent), Gauteng (23 percent) and the Western Cape
(17 percent)," it states.
Internationally, murder is seen as the most
reliable crime trend, as the definition of murder does not really differ
from country to country.
"It is furthermore very difficult to over or under-report murder or to hide
a murder forever."
The report puts the number of attempted murders at 78,9 per 100,000 (up from
70,2 in 2001/02), assault with intent to cause grievous bodily harm at 585,9
(down from 592,4), and common assault at 621,6 (up from 587,7).
It says the number of rapes dropped from
121,8 per 100,000 in 2001/02 to 115,3 in 2002/03 -- the lowest since
1994/95.
Selebi said there was a significant
decrease in high profile (sensational) cases of aggravated robbery.
Hijacking of motor vehicles dropped by 20.2 percent, and bank-related
robberies (bank robberies and cash-in-transit heists) by 15.4 percent.
Both these categories of crime had reached the lowest levels since 1996/97.
However, other aggravated robberies, street robbery, and housebreaking had
increased, Selebi said.
Increases in various robbery categories, and the recent spate of "violent
and horrendous crimes", remained a concern to the SAPS. Police had made
enormous efforts to reduce levels of serious crime.
This occurred against a backdrop of increasing generators of conditions
conducive to crime, such as rapid urbanisation, changing demographics in
society, increasing number of households, and increasing levels of substance
abuse.
With the exception of aggravated robbery
(up by 6.6 percent), the SAPS had reached most of its targets set out in the
National Crime Combating Strategy (NCCS) for reducing the incidence of
murder, rape and assault.
Commercial crime dropped by 5.7 percent, theft of motor vehicles by 5.8
percent, and theft out of motor vehicles by 3.6 percent. But, other thefts
and malicious damage to property increased by 5.4 percent and 5.9 percent
respectively.
Selebi said the increase in other thefts should be understood within the
context that this crime mainly involved the loss of small and often not
uniquely identifiable items, such as money, jewellery, cellphones, and
tools.
According to the annual report, contact
crimes, or crimes against the person, such as murder and attempted murder,
rape and attempted rape, assault, and aggravated robbery, accounted for 39.9
percent of serious crime reported. Source : Sapa /jk/ks Date : 22 Sep 2003
16:08
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