
Cape Town looking to expand powers to fight crime
A playground of supercars in Camps Bay and fine dining with a view.
But behind the glossy brochure is a darker truth.
Gang and gun violence keep making headlines, with police unable to stem the tide.
The Mayor is once again calling for policing powers to be devolved.
And he's hoping the new Acting Police Minister will be more receptive.
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The Herald
4 hours ago
- The Herald
DA pushes for ad hoc committee on police to get down to business
The DA says it sees parliament's ad hoc committee that will investigate allegations of political meddling and corruption in the police service as a vital and rare opportunity to confront and root out the rot in the top levels of the service. DA spokesperson on police Ian Cameron said on Friday the committee has considered robust terms of reference to ensure full and proper investigation can take place. He said the c ommittee hopes to adopt the terms of reference by Monday. The DA had proposed and secured a number of key terms which had been included in the terms of reference, he said. These included the use of sworn testimony and obtaining documents and evidence from all relevant witnesses, including those implicated in political interference, corruption and organised crime infiltration of the police service. Other terms of reference are i nvestigating political interference in policing, including the disbandment of the political killings task team (PKTT) and the freezing of key crime intelligence vacancies, investigating allegations involving senior politicians, law enforcement officials, prosecutors and judges and investigating the 121 missing dockets removed from the PKTT and examining the integrity of SAPS crime intelligence operations. 'Once adopted, the ad hoc committee must get down to business' Cameron said. Cameron said the DA would ensure the committee leaves no stone unturned. 'We will demand testimony from every relevant and involved person and documents that evidence every critical weakness in the SAPS. South Africa cannot tolerate delays when the integrity of its policing and justice systems hangs in the balance.' TimesLIVE


eNCA
7 hours ago
- eNCA
Kwambonambi women under siege
KWAMBONAMBI - A small rural community near Empangeni says its women and girls are under siege. A schoolgirl was found dead in KwaMbonambi on Monday. Her family has spent a week frantically searching for her. Blood-stained leaves and a handprint on a tree trunk speak of Khethokuhle Ncube's dying moments. The 16-year-old's body was discovered a week after she went missing. She was found in the bushes a few meters from her home, next to the road. As her grieving family prepares to lay her to rest, they hope whoever killed her is found and brought to book. Khethokuhle joins a growing list of women killed in KwaMbonambi's Ward 8. 29-year-old Lindeni Mthembu was murdered in September 2023. Her next-door neighbour, Londiwe Zulu, was found dead near her home in June this year. Her boyfriend was briefly detained. Police say they are investigating both cases, but the women's grieving families are sceptical. Authorities say at least 11 women have been killed in KwaMbonambi Ward 8 since 2022. Very few arrests have been made. They say the local police must do more to arrest the perpetrators. In the meantime, they've turned to prayer meetings and awareness campaigns to address the crisis. KwaZulu-Natal has one of the highest numbers of gender-based violence and femicide in the country. Police statistics show that 110 women were murdered in the province between October and December last year. The National Prosecuting Authority says, over and above reporting cases of abuse before it's too late, community education is needed to support efforts to end femicide. As the KwaMbonambi community buries yet another daughter, it desperately pleads for better policing and other means to protect women - and deliver justice for victims.

IOL News
7 hours ago
- IOL News
Durban twins to remain behind bars in Prasa manager murder case
Four men who are charged with the murder of a Prasa manager. From left, twin brothers Vukile and Vukani Mchunu, Sandile Sakhile Ngcobo, and Mthandeni Cele. Twin brothers, who have been accused of killing Jacob Khoaele, the regional manager of Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa), over a tender, were denied bail when they appeared in the Durban Magistrate's Court on Friday. The court found that the twins failed to provide exceptional circumstances warranting their release, while the State revealed that it was in possession of video footage of the shooting - evidence that will be led during the trial. The State has alleged that Khoaele was murdered after refusing to approve payment for work done by the Mchunu twins, which he deemed substandard. It was also revealed that a former PRASA manager had resigned over similar disputes with the brothers. The brothers, Vukani and Vukile Mchunu, Sandile Sakhile Ngcobo, and Mthandeni Cele have been charged for Khoaele's murder. While the Mchunu brothers applied for bail, their co accused Ngcobo and Cele abandoned their bid. Khoaele was shot dead on January 22, 2025, in La Lucia, while returning from his grandchild's school meeting. The footage showed Khoaele's vehicle being blocked on Shelbourne Road, as he was returning home. Police investigation also revealed that the Prasa manager was followed by a Hyundai Atos on that fateful day. According to the affidavit by investigating officer, Sergeant Nkosinathi Madonsela, which was read by Senior State Prosecutor Calvin Govender in court, the shooters began firing at Khoaele while still in their car, then exited and continued shooting. The incident was captured on a nearby camera, Madonsela said. 'A Hyundai Atos was seen in video footage parked at Khoaele's workplace. The same vehicle is seen leaving Khoaele's workplace, goes to the nearby Sasol garage, and that is when the occupants are seen coming out of it. One goes inside the garage shop to buy airtime and drinks,' Madonsela said. He said after the garage trip, the Atos went back to Prasa and parked there. He said Khoaele left work at 9am and the car followed him. 'After some time, Khoaele is seen driving back to his work, and the suspects were still following him,' he added. Madonsela said the suspects stayed at Prasa until Khoaele left at 4pm, and they followed him. He said near Durban Station, two vehicles, a brown Ford Ranger and a Red Toyota double cab, were seen joining the Atos. Madonsela said the car registrations of the vehicles were visible except for the Toyota. He said the number plates on the Ranger was cloned and the Atos belonged to a woman who said she used it as a Uber service. The woman, who has not been named, said the Atos was driven by Samkelo Shange. Shange was said to have implicated the accused. When Shange was brought in for an interview, he told Madonsela that Ngcobo called him on January 21 in the afternoon and told him to fetch someone from Umlazi V-section the following morning. Shange said when he got to uMlazi, the twins were with three other people. He said Vukani got into the car and told him that they were going to Durban Station. 'When they got there, Vukani told him (Shange) that he was to check someone, and he wanted to see all the vehicles driving inside the Prasa office. Shange parked facing the gate,' Madonsela said. In their application for bail, the twins from Ngonyameni in uMlazi said they were 35 years old and co-owned Masoloma Trading company. Their lawyer, Musawenkosi Mkhize, said the brothers were married - Vukani has six children and Vukile has five. Mkhize said the brothers also co-owned a property valued at R700,000 and cars, which included a Ford Ranger and a Mercedes-Benz. He said the twins stated that they were breadwinners who earned approximately R35,000 a month. Mkhize said his clients ran a business and that their employees had not been paid their salaries due to their incarceration. He added that the Mchunu's were traditional healers who also ran a church and that bail should be granted because the State's case against his clients were weak. 'How are the two applicants linked? The incident occurred around January this year. The number of months has lapsed, arrests were only made in July,' said Mkhize. He said judging by the investigating officer's affidavit, the State relied on a sole witness. However, Magistrate Siyanda Mlaba asked Mkhize to elaborate on his clients "exceptional circumstances", as what he presented did not qualify as such. Govender, said it was the onus of the applicants to prove that they have exceptional circumstances, and they have failed to do so. He told the court that this was a bail application and that all the evidence would be led during the trial. He said the police wanted to ensure they had the right information before making an arrest. 'That is why there was a delay,' said Govender. He submitted that the State was of the view that the twins would interfere with witnesses should they be released on bail. Govender said the previous manager at Prasa had to resign because of the brothers, who wanted to be paid for work that Prasa was not satisfied with. He said Khoale paid with his life because he also refused to pay the twins for work that Prasa was not happy with. 'Everyone at Prasa is afraid of the applicants due to the known fact that they threatened their colleague and killed the other,' Govender added. Delivering his ruling, Magistrate Mlaba said that bail was under Schedule 6 of the Criminal Procedure Act. He said the accused were facing serious allegations, and emphasised that this was a bail application and not a trial. Mlaba criticised Mkhize, saying that while he spoke a lot, he failed to tell the court why his clients should get bail. 'I remember asking him to hit the nail on the head. I even asked him the definition of exceptional circumstances. But the attorney was not giving what I was expecting. I ended up just keeping quiet,' he said. Govender said the Director of Public Prosecutions was yet to decide if Shange would be a Section 204 State witness. The matter was postponed to September 29 for further investigation.