07/15/2008
ATM bombed in Lenasia
This is the newest method of robbing banks in South Africa..why bother going inside...just blow up the ATM. The ingenuity of the average South African criminal continues to make strides..
Five people allegedly bombed an Automated Teller Machine in Lenasia on Wednesday, Johannesburg police said
Inspector Mpho Kgasoane said the five suspects were seen at the ATM in Starling street around 3am.
"They took an undisclosed amount of money and drove away in two getaway cars," said Kgasoane.
No one was injured. Cases of malicious damage to property, theft and dealing in explosives were opened. - Sapa
17:35 Posted in Crime | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: South Africa, ANC, Crime, ATM, bank robbery
07/02/2008
Migrants in South Africa fear for their lives - 20 May 08
South African leaders are now trying to bring the situation under control.
Kalay Maistry, Al Jazeera's correspondent in South Africa, says that police are out in force, but thousands of foreign workers who fled their homes in Johannesburg's townships after gangs of youths began targeting them, say they are still too terrified to go back.
19:42 Posted in Xenophobia | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: Xenophobia, South Africa, Crime, MBeki, racism
02/07/2007
The New South Africa Video
You have to love You Tube. Here is the latest welcoming video from the ANC to all the World Cup Visitors.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zf_PURfI73U
14:28 Posted in World Cup 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: south Africa, video, world cup 2010, Crime, ANC, Mbeki, Johannesburg
10/24/2006
Shocking figures reveal rape trends in SA
| October 24 2006 at 04:35AM | |
| By Karen Breytenbach
The MRC considers this research paper of "substantial international importance" as it is the first of its kind outside North America. It is also the first to have a single set of data on the rape of intimate and non-intimate partners. The findings contribute significantly to an understanding of why rape is so common in South Africa. The researchers looked at reasons why men raped and common factors in their backgrounds. Adversity in childhood, alcohol abuse and, surprisingly, a more educated mother were associated with partner and non-partner rapes. Non-partner rapes were also associated with greater susceptibility to peer pressure to have sex, membership of a gang or using drugs. The destructive impact of apartheid on the family made many children vulnerable to sexual and emotional abuse, the study found. "The other noticeable set of factors are those related to particular ideas of masculinity, where women are seen as objects to be conquered and controlled, sex is often seen as an impersonal act of physical gratification, with masculinity often defined in terms of sexual conquest, and where male peer group bonding is emphasised," the MRC report read. "Contrary to popular belief that men who rape are poor and unable to win women for consensual sex, we found men of relatively higher social status were more likely to rape." A survey of 1 295 sexually active women from the rural Eastern Cape explored the link between HIV and gender-based violence. HIV infection was associated with having three or more partners in the preceding year and having a partner who was three or more years older and more educated than the woman. The Health Promotion Research and Development Group found sexual assault, violence and depression common among HIV-positive women. A sub-division of the unit is looking into male attitudes and is working with traditional leaders to include health messages during initiation. "Especially in terms of HIV, men are part of the problem. We have to teach boys and men to respect their sexual health and women," Mbewu said.
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14:10 Posted in Crime | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: south Africa, world cup 2010, Crime, ANC, Mbeki, Johannesburg
10/17/2006
Cash Heists
October 17 2006 at 06:51AM
By Vusumuzi Ka Nzapheza
The army will not be deployed to assist embattled cash-in-transit security guards against the danger they face daily, but the police will supply armed officers to accompany the cash vans in a bid to protect security guards and deter armed robbers.
This follows Monday's meeting between Police Commissioner Jackie Selebi, the Motor Transport Workers' Union (MTWU) and its federation, Fedusa.
MTWU spokesperson Emily Fourie said the meeting with Selebi had been positive.
'Even when they are heavily armed robbers'
Last week the union threatened to go on strike unless the government intervened to stop the carnage that has seen security guards transporting cash being killed or seriously wounded almost daily.
"The constitution of the country does not allow the army to be used internally against its own people, even when they are heavily armed robbers," Fourie said.
Selebi told the meeting the cash-in-transit heists, which had increased by 74 percent since 2005, were already receiving urgent attention in partnership with the South African Banking Risk Intelligence Centre (Sabric) and the South African Reserve Bank.
All the banks in the country were also involved in a project on bank robberies and cash-heists called Operation Greed. Business Against Crime was also involved in combating commercial crimes.
Reserve Bank governor Tito Mboweni said recently the cash-heists were one of the things that kept him awake at night.
Curb the spate of heists
"We have to ensure that cash is available throughout the country by moving it in bulk from the main production points to every part of the country," Mboweni said.
Fourie said the meeting agreed on some actions that needed to be taken immediately to curb the spate of heists.
"The police will help with the training of security personnel and with minimum standards in respect of the equipment," she said.
Currently, a security guard wanting to work in the cash-in-transit industry gets three weeks' training, which includes firearm handling and accounting work.
Fourie said the union, which claims to represent 90 percent of the cash-in-transit industry, will hold further meetings with the employers about conditions of employment.
The participation of the employers was necessary because some of the problems, such as a shortage of bulletproof vests and the lack of air-conditioning in some of the vehicles, could be addressed immediately by them, Fourie said.
In the long-term, the law could also allow security guards to carry heavier weapons instead of the current 9mm and .38 pistols against the criminals' AK-47 and R5 rifles.
The union will decide on Monday whether the planned protest action should go ahead.
This article was originally published on page 1 of Cape Times on October 17, 2006
15:21 Posted in Crime | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: South Africa, CAsh Heists, Crime, World Cup 2010, Safari, Game parks
10/16/2006
SA won't be ready for 2010, IOL readers say
| October 11 2006 at 12:05PM | |
| By Renee Moodie Comments from those who believed the country will not be ready were:
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15:10 Posted in Zuma Trial | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: south Africa, world cup 2010, Crime, ANC, Mbeki, Johannesburg
Eersterus lives in fear
| October 16 2006 at 09:39AM | |
| By Janine du Plessis
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14:48 Posted in Crime | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: south Africa, world cup 2010, Crime, ANC, Mbeki, Johannesburg
Sheriff battling to serve MPs with subpoenas
| October 15 2006 at 12:48PM | |
| By Chiara Carter |
Each week Hurter's office sends letters to parliament's legal advisers with copies of the documents they intend serving to get permission to enter. "Sometime we get a yes - especially if it is a garnishee order aimed at an employer who must make deductions from someone's salary. Aside from Goniwe, we've mostly had co-operation from Parliament this year on maintenance related matters. But on the other matters we often are either ignored or refused.
According to many, a large number of MPs and officials struggle to make it through the month on their salaries.
This situation is often compounded by their having to do constituency work and those new to the lifestyle falling into a debt-trap.
It has been alleged that National Assembly speaker Baleka Mbete has been blocking the sheriff's attempts to subpoena Goniwe for a maintenance hearing. Goniwe said he refused to comment on a "private, family matter", but the issue is to be raised in parliament by the DA next week.
Lulamile Mapholoba, political adviser to Mbete, said the speaker's office was not aware of any attempt to summons Goniwe in parliament's precincts.
- This article was originally published on page 1 of Sunday Argus on October 15, 2006
14:34 Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: south Africa, world cup 2010, Crime, ANC, Mbeki, Johannesburg
10/15/2006
All in a days work as hijackers go on spree
| October 09 2006 at 04:26PM | |
| A hijacker was killed and a crime victim wounded in a crime spree in Port Elizabeth on Monday, police said. |
They drove on a gravel road where the vehicle stalled. They got out and ran away.
Police were investigating the four crime scenes, Brink said. - Sapa
14:40 Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: south Africa, world cup 2010, Crime, ANC, Mbeki, Cape Town, Highjack
10/13/2006
SA citizens fed up with corruption
| October 13 2006 at 12:13PM | |
| South Africans are angry about growing corruption and that the politically well-connected seem to be the main beneficiaries of democracy, researchers said on Friday.
Brown said there was huge anger among citizens over a perceived lack of delivery and lack of access to a closed elite. "They (this elite) look perhaps to the next election but never to the next generation," said Brown. Corruption was identified as a key problem. "The head of the executive (President Thabo Mbeki) is not holding the executive (the ministers) accountable," said Brown. "Ministers who year after year have dirty departments should lose their jobs. That's accountability," she said. She named the home affairs and correctional services departments and the provincial premiers as some of the worst problems. Villa-Vicencio said citizens' anger was due to the income gap, their exclusion from the elite, and corruption. The IJR defined corruption broadly, including maladministration. He suggested that the government should prioritise the key issues of battling crime and corruption, and delivering on education and transport. "If we get these three things in place, I want to suggest we would be a better place for it," said Villa-Vicencio. He said the IJR presented the report to the Presidency on Thursday. It is the third IJR transformation audit. Previous reports were also handed to the government. "I can say without a shadow of a doubt that they read the report, they study it and come back for clarification," said Villa-Vicencio. - Sapa |
14:50 Posted in Zuma Trial | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: south Africa, world cup 2010, Crime, ANC, Mbeki, Cape Town, Highjack






