OPINION

Violent crime in SA

William Saunderson-Meyer |

06 September 2024

William Saunderson-Meyer writes on new Police Minister Senzo Mchunu’s refreshing response to this pervasive problem

JAUNDICED EYE

This is Cyril Ramaphosa’s second bite at the presidential cherry. 

History will be harsh on that first term. It’s not only that he failed to rectify the collapses and reverses of the criminal Jacob Zuma. Demonstrably, measured by virtually every important economic and social criterion, matters have steadily got worse under Ramaphosa. 

However, although the bar isn’t very high, there are faint signs that he might do better this time around. Largely this is the result of a Government of National Unity. A basic requirement for a good administration is choosing good Cabinet ministers and, for the first time in decades, we have some ministers who are visibly making an effort to deliver results.

Since crime, especially violent crime, is a key issue, the appointment of the new Minister of Police, Senzo Mchunu is particularly worth watching. The early signs are good. At least he is making all the right noises. 

For one, unlike his dire predecessor, Bheki Cele, he seems to appreciate that a well-functioning SA Police Service (SAPS) criminal intelligence division is fundamental to effective policing. Moves are already afoot to improve the operation of this neglected and dysfunctional section and Mchunu seems to be responsive, unlike his counterpart at the Department of Health, to embracing outside expertise.

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Nor is Mchunu wasting his energy, as Cele used to, trying to polish turds. The quarterly release of crime statistics was always a public ordeal for Cele as he tried to put a positive spin on a remorseless downward march in the numbers, trying to convince South Africans that the police were winning the battle.

Against the cumulative weight of all the evidence, Cele would seize on a tiny improvement in one category, on a fractional pause in the negative trend in another, to reassure us that we shouldn’t be as fearful of crime as every social survey indicates we are. The incidence of murder — an ideal statistical proxy for all criminal violence because it is the most reliably recorded — would be buried, metaphorically speaking, among some carefully selected and buffed nuggets of “good news”. 

Last week, presenting the crime statistics for the first quarter of the government’s 2024/25 financial year, Senzo Mchunu took a different tack. Instead of waxing lyrical, as Cele would have done, on the fact that there were only 30 more murders in the period April-June than in the same period the previous year, while ignoring the fact that it’s against a steadily increasing trend over the past dozen years — Mchunu was at least honest.

“Contact crimes, in particular, are wreaking havoc and instilling fear, he said.  The numbers told a “sobering story” and were a “stark reminder” that urgent action was needed to deal with what he described as a crisis.