SOUTH AFRICA: President acknowledges crime is a problem
Source: IRIN
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JOHANNESBURG , 9 February (IRIN) - Speculation before President Thabo Mbeki's State of
the Nation address on Friday was not about what he would say or do about the country's high crime rate, but about whether he would mention it at all. In the event, Mbeki did speak about crime and
Johann Burger, a senior crime researcher at the Institute for Security Studies, an academic think-thank, said he was "rather surprised by the time he allotted to it" in his address at the opening of
parliament. The president's take on crime was so eagerly anticipated that news snaps sent out minutes after his speech reported that he had mentioned the word 'crime' 16 times, as opposed to
mentioning it twice in his previous state of the nation address. In 2006 just over 18,000 people were murdered in South Africa and on average 151 women were raped daily - statistics that prompted
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu to remark: "Just look what happens with a car hijacking. The scared owner hands over the keys and, for no earthly reason, he or she is shot dead in
cold blood for the sheer hell of it; utterly gratuitously, wantonly." Mbeki's parliamentary address was an about-face on his recent comments during a national radio broadcast that crime was "a
perception", which provoked widespread anger. On Friday he told South Africans: "Certainly, we cannot erase that which is ugly and repulsive, and claim happiness that comes with freedom if
communities live in fear, closeted behind walls and barbed wire, ever-anxious in their houses, on the streets and on our roads, unable freely to enjoy our public spaces. Obviously, we must continue
and further intensify the struggle against crime." The president said the police force would be boosted from about 152,000 to more than 180,000 over the next three years, and that their living and
working conditions, as well as levels of training, would be improved. He also vowed to improve intelligence gathering, border controls, the efficiency of the courts, to build new prisons and create
greater cooperation between the police and the private security industry. Burger said the increase in police numbers - currently one policeman for every 373 people, which was already above United
Nations recommendations of one police officer for every 400 people - and Mbeki's use of words, such as "decisive" and "eradicate", illustrated that he was taking the fight against crime seriously. Although the annual budget for the criminal justice system rose from US$2.3 billion in 2001 to $4.2 billion in 2006, Burger said the real problem in the fight against crime was "command and control",
or the management and leadership of the police, an issue Mbeki acknowledged in his speech and promised would be improved. Governments in both the developed and developing world "tend to rely on the
criminal justice system to solve crime problems, and neglect socioeconomic issues," Burger commented. South Africa's unofficial unemployment rate is estimated at around 40 percent - against the
official unemployment figure of 25.6 percent - and, according to UNAIDS, although South Africa is the continent's economic powerhouse, 34.1 percent of its almost 48 million people live on US$2 or less
day. "None of the great social problems we have to solve is capable of resolution outside the context of the creation of jobs and the alleviation and eradication of poverty," Mbeki said. The "cold
reality" was that "the overwhelming majority of violent crimes against the person occur in the most socio-economically deprived areas of our country, and require strong and sustained community
interventions focused on crime preventions." The president has been seen as a denialist by his detractors, with the evidence most widely used for this view being his handling of South Africa's
HIV/AIDS pandemic, which was characterised by a lack of political will, questioning the disease's existence, the appointment of AIDS dissidents as his advisors, and the loyal backing of a health
minister whose recipe for combating the virus was a clove of garlic and spoonful of olive oil. The country has recorded the world's second highest number of HIV/AIDS cases. So, when Mbeki dismissed
crime in South Africa as exaggerated during a radio interview last month, and a few days later national police commissioner Jackie Selebi, a personal friend of an alleged crime syndicate boss, asked
"what's all the fuss about crime", there was a storm of public outrage. A cellular phone text message campaign gathered over 400,000 signatories in 48 hours, thousands of letters were sent directly
to the president, tourism organisations cited crime as the reason the industry - seen as a main engine for creating employment - was at less than 50 percent of its capacity, and the local media was
disparaging and sarcastic about a president who seemed to think the country was too small a stage for his "prodigious talents". Barney Mthombothi, editor of the Financial Mail, a weekly journal,
said in his column, "I don't think Mbeki has made an effort to understand this society in all its complexity; to press and feel its pulse. He leads the country with an exile mind-set. Attending the
odd imbizo [gathering of advisors] won't do the trick." Mbeki spent three decades in exile, mostly in England, for opposing the apartheid government. National sentiment about the level of crime
reached near hysteria after the murder of the internationally renowned historian, David Rattray, in late January; then rose by several notches a few days ahead of Mbeki's speech when First National
Bank, one of South Africa's largest, apparently came under political pressure to abort a million-dollar advertising campaign designed to force the government to take crime seriously. go/he







