
Keep your children safe during winter school holidays
School holidays are a time for children to take a break from their daily routines and spend quality time with family and friends. Adolescents also start exploring their independence and freedom.
As thousands of South African children prepare to go on a winter school break from June 27 to July 22, parents and guardians are urged to prioritise their children's safety.
Police spokesperson Captain Johan van Dyk warns that holiday periods often see an increase in crimes involving children, particularly when they are left alone.
'Parents must make sure that an adult is present at all times or children are left under trustworthy supervision,' he said.
Van Dyk also expressed some concerns, which can make children easy targets for robbers.
'Children walk with their cellphones and electronic equipment exposed in public, which enhances the possibility of being robbed.
'They are also tricked by criminals asking for assistance with their cellphones', only for their phones to be stolen.
'Social media platforms also pose a threat from strangers whereby they are befriended and asked to meet at a place and are abducted or raped,' said Van Dyk.
To reduce these incidents, he highlighted crime prevention operations and patrols that are being executed daily in all of the Tshwane policing areas.
'There are ongoing awareness campaigns executed on a weekly basis at schools where police interact with the children on various topics such as drugs, gang-related topics, personal safety tips, bullying and social media awareness and safety measures.'
He said CPFs play an integrated part within the communities with patrols and information gathering to keep children safe during the holidays.
Van Dyk advised parents to always know where their children are and where they are going at all times.
'Make sure who their friends are and which social media platforms they make use of. Any uncertainty, they can visit their closest SAPS station to assist or report it by contacting 0800 10111 or download the SAPS app and share information there,' he said.
The Department of Basic Education advised parents to prioritise their children's safety by adhering to the following guidelines:
– Children must avoid talking to strangers, especially when you're not around.
– Teach your children to always tell you if they have been approached by a stranger, and never keep secrets.
– If your child needs a lift, tell them only to get lifts with friends, and to get out when they feel uncomfortable.
– If your child gets lost, they should ask for help from a police officer, another grown-up with children or someone working at a nearby shop.
– Have your children learn and know their address and telephone number by heart.
– Try to keep your children within your sight or another adult whom you trust.
– When out and about visiting places, always arrange a meeting point for you and your child, in case either of you gets separated and lost.
– Make sure you all travel together or have seats close together on a bus or taxi.
– Always accompany your child to public toilets.
– Stick to busy, well-lit roads, and avoid shortcuts through alleyways.
– If your child thinks someone is following them, they should cross the road or go to a place with lots of people around, like a bus stop or shop.
– Encourage your child to speak up if they are being bullied or feel they might be in danger.
Do you have more information about the story?
Please send us an email to bennittb@rekord.co.za or phone us on 083 625 4114.
For free breaking and community news, visit Rekord's websites: Rekord East
For more news and interesting articles, like Rekord on Facebook, follow us on Twitter or Instagram or TikTok.
At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Maverick
3 hours ago
- Daily Maverick
Molefe and Gama in Hawks custody as Transnet corruption returns to court
More than a decade after the dodgy locomotive deal, two senior MK party MPs — Brian Molefe and Siyabonga Gama — face legal action for allegedly siphoning off R93m through Trillian Capital. Their arrests revive old Zondo Commission questions about whether grand corruption ever really pays back. Former Transnet bosses Brian Molefe and Siyabonga Gama — long seen as State Capture architects — handed themselves over to the Investigating Directorate for Corruption (Idac) on Monday morning. The pair — now sitting MPs for Jacob Zuma's uMkhonto Wesizwe (MK) party — are expected to appear in the Palm Ridge Magistrate's Court on fraud, corruption and money laundering charges directly tied to the wider Transnet locomotives corruption scandal that formed one of the core chapters of the Zondo Commission's State Capture reports. Read more: Backstory: the locomotive deal symbolic of an era Under Jacob Zuma's presidency, Molefe was appointed CEO of Transnet in 2011 with a mandate to oversee a massive rail expansion plan. In May 2015, a transaction advisory contract for 1,064 new locomotives — one of the single biggest procurement deals in South African state-owned enterprises history — was awarded to JP Morgan but soon cancelled amid internal battles and reassigned to Trillian Capital, a Gupta-linked firm. By December 2015, Transnet paid Trillian R93.4-million, signed off by CFO Garry Pita and then-CEO Gama. Three days later, R74-million was quietly rerouted — a diversion that Justice Zondo's report flagged as a key laundering step in the wider locomotives corruption scheme. Today, the long train of justice is inching back into court. Idac spokesperson Henry Mamothame confirmed their arrests to Daily Maverick, noting that a broader press release would be issued after the two had appeared in court. Zondo Commission: findings The Zondo Commission named Molefe as a 'primary architect' of Transnet's State Capture phase, finding he misled the board, suppressed oversight, and signed off on contracts that enabled Gupta proxies to loot through Regiments and also explicitly linked this R93-million payment to the bigger locomotives procurement fraud, and recommended that Molefe, Gama and others be prosecuted to break what it called the 'cycle of impunity' that allowed grand corruption to thrive unchecked. The politics of public money Their arrests put the MK party under an uncomfortable spotlight. MK party spokesperson Nhlamulo Ndhlela had not responded to calls or questions from Daily Maverick by the time of publication. The locomotives procurement cost jumped from R38-billion to more than R50-billion — billions that the public purse absorbed through Transnet's balance sheet while oversight bodies looked the other a decade later, the question is whether those billions can ever be clawed back. What's waiting at the next stop? The Palm Ridge court will rule on bail conditions this week. The National Prosecuting Authority must now show whether it can go beyond headlines to force real accountability on powerful networks that, for years, treated SOEs as private cash the case holds or finds itself in infinite legal limbo will demonstrate whether the willpower left to pursue the Zondo Commission's recommendations remains. DM


eNCA
3 hours ago
- eNCA
Committee wants Section 34 probe into SAPS officials
JOHANNESBURG - Parliament's Police Portfolio Committee is turning up the heat on senior officials in the South African Police Service (SAPS) implicated in an alleged corruption scandal. The committee is pushing for Section 34 inquiries into the head of Police Crime Intelligence, Dumisani Khumalo, and six of his colleagues. They're accused of playing a role in fraudulent appointments within SAPS's powerful Crime Intelligence Unit. Their court appearance relates to the appointment of a Technical Support System Manager. The Investigative Directorate Against Corruption alleges that the 30-year-old employee has no formal qualifications required for the SAPS position. Committee Chairperson Ian Cameron says the law must take its course, but also determine accountability at the highest level. The officials appeared in the Pretoria magistrate's court on 27 June. All seven are facing charges of fraud and corruption. Six of the accused, including Khumalo, were granted bail of R10,000 each. A seventh accused, Philani Lushaba, faces a pending corruption case and has to reapply for bail under a Schedule 6 offence. The others face a schedule 5 offence as they have no other cases.


The Citizen
5 hours ago
- The Citizen
Fort Hare bodyguard's murder: 2 arrested, third suspect on the run
Police have arrested two alleged hitmen in connection with the murder of Mboneli Vesele, who was the bodyguard of Fort Hare vice chancellor and principal, Prof Sakhele Buhlungu. The Witness reports that the other suspects were handcuffed in Zakariyya Park, south of Johannesburg, earlier in June. This brings the number of suspects arrested in connection with the Fort Hare murder to 12. Ten others have been arrested since 2023, with some still in police custody. Vesele was shot and killed inside a vehicle while waiting for the vice chancellor outside the principal's home in Alice, in the Eastern Cape, on January 6, 2023. Police spokesperson Brigadier Athlenda Mathe says SAPS put out a call to the public for information linked to the murder. On November 15, 2024, the SAPS published the alleged hitmen's photographs and a request to the public for assistance in tracking down the three wanted suspects after obtaining a J50 warrant of arrest for Bafana Chiliza, Nkosiyazi 'Dipopoz' Maphumulo and Siphiwo 'Spijojo' Jejane. 'On June 21, the team proceeded to Zakkariya Park in Johannesburg following intelligence and information from members of the public. Two of the three [alleged] hitmen were arrested. The SAPS confirms Bafana Chiliza and Nkosiyazi Maphumulo are in custody and will be charged accordingly,' Mathe says. She adds that the suspects are expected to appear in the Alice Magistrate's Court today, and police are still searching for the third alleged hitman, Siphiwo Jejane. Breaking news at your fingertips… Follow Caxton Network News on Facebook and join our WhatsApp channel. Nuus wat saakmaak. Volg Caxton Netwerk-nuus op Facebook en sluit aan by ons WhatsApp-kanaal. Read original story on At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!