Latest news with #SilencingTheGun

IOL News
6 days ago
- IOL News
Heideveld community rallies against gun violence after tragic shooting of a witness
A 30-year-old woman was gunned down in Heideveld on Saturday morning — just a kilometre from Phoenix Secondary School in Manenberg, where police and community leaders were launching an initiative to 'silence the guns.' Image: Mandilakhe Tshwete THE 30-year-old woman shot and killed in a drive-by attack in Heideveld at the weekend was a key witness in a gang-related case. 'That might be the reason she was shot and killed,' said Manenberg Community Police Forum deputy chairperson Vanessa Adriaanse The shooting on 5th Street at about 11:15am, close to Phoenix Secondary School happened a kilometre away from the venue for the Western Cape police board's anti-gun campaign launch. The #SilencingTheGun campaign is aimed at raising awareness about the devastating impact of illegal firearms. Adriaanse said the shooting took place while community members, mostly women, were gathered for the campaign launch in honour of Women's Day. 'This is devastating, to think that we were launching the silencing the guns campaign where we mostly invited females because it's Women's Day. We wanted to acknowledge the women on the Cape Flats. We received a call while at the event that they had just shot and killed a female,' she said. She said they rushed to the scene. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ 'How abnormal can our community become that we are standing over the body of the 30-year-old woman. Our hearts are bleeding. What is happening to women? What must we do?' Western Cape police spokesperson Malcolm Pojie said the circumstances and motive of the shooting form part of the investigation 'Manenberg SAPS registered a murder case for investigation after a 30-year-old woman was shot and fatally wounded during a drive-by shooting this morning, Saturday, 9 August 2025, at about 11:15am in 5th Street, Heideveld. The suspects are yet to be identified and apprehended.' Police have appealed to anyone with information to contact Crime Stop on 08600 10111 or use the MySAPS mobile application. Western Cape Deputy provincial police commissioner Luyanda Damoyi described the circulation of illegal firearms in the areas as 'tremendous'. 'Many of the firearms currently in circulation were once legally owned, but after certain incidents involving the owners, such as robberies at their homes, they became illegal. Some have been lost by security forces or stolen from security companies, and others from the South African Police Service. 'What we are doing now is taking measures to address this. We are regularly inspecting firearm licences held by owners. One area of concern is deceased estates. For example, if someone owned three firearms and then died, their family might not report this to the police. We have identified 1,502 firearms linked to deceased owners, and we are visiting those addresses. We have already recovered a number of weapons in different provinces.' Cape Times

TimesLIVE
7 days ago
- TimesLIVE
Stolen ‘Prinsloo guns' still on Cape Flats streets, Western Cape police say
Some of the firearms stolen by former police colonel Christiaan Prinsloo and an accomplice, which were meant for destruction but instead sold to Cape Flats gangs, remain unaccounted for. This was revealed by Western Cape deputy provincial commissioner for visible policing Maj-Gen Luyanda Damoyi during the signing of a #SilenceTheGuns pledge in Manenberg, Cape Town, on Saturday. Prinsloo, then commander of the Gauteng firearm, liquor and second-hand goods control unit, admitted to smuggling more than 2,000 firearms stored by the police — some handed in for destruction. Many of those firearms ended up in the hands of criminal gangs, unleashing bloodshed on the Cape Flats. Prinsloo was in 2016 handed an 18-year jail sentence for a slew of charges including corruption, racketeering and theft after entering into a plea-and-sentencing agreement with the state. He was released on parole in 2020. According to the NGO Gun Free SA, more than 2,000 'Prinsloo guns' were stolen from police stores in Silverton, Pretoria, and distributed to criminals between 2007 and 2015. 'The majority have been recovered, but not all of them,' Damoyi said. 'They are still a concern.' The Nyanga subdistrict community police board, which comprises the policing precincts of Nyanga, Elsies River, Bishop Lavis, Gugulethu, Mannenberg, Philippi East, Samora Machel, Delft and Ravensmead, signed a #SilencingTheGun pledge.

TimesLIVE
09-08-2025
- TimesLIVE
Drive-by shooting mars #SilencingTheGuns pledge
As community policing forums and police gathered at a school in Cape Town on Saturday pledging to 'silence the guns' a woman was killed in a drive-by shooting less than 2km away. The Nyanga subdistrict community police board — comprising Nyanga, Elsies River, Bishop Lavis, Gugulethu, Manenberg, Philippi East, Samora Machel, Delft and Ravensmead policing precincts — signed the 'Silencing The Gun' pledge in Manenberg. The 30-year-old woman's covered body lay on the pavement in the rain outside a row of houses on 5th Street in Heideveld. Provincial police spokesperson Lt-Col Malcolm Pojie said she was shot at 11:15am. The street was deserted when TimesLIVE visited the scene. Two police vans blocked the road, which was cordoned off with yellow tape. Pojie said the woman was 'shot and fatally wounded during a drive-by shooting'. Manenberg police are investigating the murder. 'The circumstances and motive form part of the continued investigation. The suspects are yet to be identified and apprehended,' said Pojie.

IOL News
09-08-2025
- IOL News
Community unites against gun violence following tragic shooting in Heideveld
A 30-year-old woman was gunned down in Heideveld on Saturday morning — just a kilometre from Phoenix Secondary School in Manenberg, where police and community leaders were launching an initiative to 'silence the guns.' Image: Mandilakhe Tshwete As police and community leaders launched an initiative to 'silence the guns' in Manenberg on Saturday, a 30-year-old woman was shot and killed in a drive-by attack. The shooting occurred on 5th Street at about 11:15 am, close to Phoenix Secondary School - a kilometre away from the venue for the Western Cape police board's anti-gun campaign launch. Western Cape police spokesperson Lieutenant-Colonel Malcolm Pojie said: 'Manenberg SAPS registered a murder case for investigation after a 30-year-old woman was shot and fatally wounded during a drive-by shooting this morning, Saturday, 9 August 2025, at about 11:15am in 5th Street, Heideveld. The circumstances and motive form part of the continued investigation. The suspects are yet to be identified and apprehended.' The Western Cape Community police board launched the #SilencingTheGun campaign in Manenberg on Saturday morning, raising awareness of the devastating impact of illegal firearms. Image: Mandilakhe Tshwete Police have appealed to anyone with information to contact Crime Stop on 08600 10111 or use the MySAPS mobile application. Manenberg Community Police Forum deputy chairperson Vanessa Adriaanse said the shooting took place while community members, mostly women, were gathered for the campaign launch in honour of Women's Day. 'This is devastating, to think that we were launching the silencing the guns campaign where we mostly invited females because it's Women's Day. We wanted to acknowledge the women on the Cape Flats. We received a call while at the event that they had just shot and killed a female,' she said. She said they rushed to the scene. 'How abnormal can our community become that we are standing over the body of the 30-year-old woman. Our hearts are bleeding. What is happening to women? What must we do?' Adriaanse said the shooting was believed to be a targeted hit. 'According to her family, she was a witness in a gang-related case. That might be the reason she was shot and killed.' Nyanga CPF sub-district spokesperson Reggie Maart said the event formed part of a broader strategy to tackle firearm-related murders in hotspot areas. 'I am deployed in one of the problematic clusters which garners 39% of gun violence incidents in the province,' he said. 'This is an initiative we decided on after a meeting with station commanders about the violent crimes happening in our communities where the weapon of choice was mostly the gun. We celebrated Women's Day at the launch – how many women have lost their sons and husbands through a gun? We are silencing that weapon of choice.' Maart said the initiative would expand to other police stations and rely on close cooperation between communities and law enforcement. City of Cape Town mayoral committee member for Safety and Security Alderman JP Smith said the shooting highlighted the crisis of illegal firearms in Cape Town. He said that while the city's enforcement agencies were on track to recover between 450 and 500 illegal guns this year, up from about 70 a year in the past, the supply of weapons and ammunition continued. 'In the last three and a half years, we've removed just over 1,700 guns from the streets. And yet in one case, we caught the same suspect twice with illegal guns just weeks apart in Gugulethu. You must start asking: where is all this coming from? Where is the ammunition coming from? There is a constant supply,' he said. Smith said while community tip-offs and gunshot detection technology were helping, the conviction rate for illegal firearm possession remained below 5 per cent, meaning many offenders returned to the streets within weeks. 'That should be a slam-dunk case. We catch you with an illegal gun, you should not be on the street after that. But with such a low conviction rate, way too many of those offenders are out shooting again,' he said. Smith repeated the City's call for the national government to devolve investigative and crime intelligence powers to provincial or local authorities. 'First prize is that the control of SAPS is devolved to provincial or local control. That is possible in law. We are capable. We have the command-and-control ability, we have invested in systems for accountability and transparency. Give us control – or at least give our staff the powers to investigate the 400-plus firearm cases where we've made arrests, and to conduct our own ballistics and crime intelligence,' he said. He said that without shutting down supply lines, including ammunition sources, the situation would not change. Western Cape Deputy provincial police commissioner Luyanda Damoyi said: 'We have noticed that the circulation of guns in this area is tremendous. Many of the firearms currently in circulation were once legally owned, but after certain incidents involving the owners, such as robberies at their homes, they became illegal. Some have been lost by security forces or stolen from security companies, and others from the South African Police Service. 'What we are doing now is taking measures to address this. We are regularly inspecting firearm licences held by owners. One area of concern is deceased estates. For example, if someone owned three firearms and then died, their family might not report this to the police. We have identified 1,502 firearms linked to deceased owners, and we are visiting those addresses. We have already recovered a number of weapons in different provinces. 'We are also raising awareness. Some families are simply not aware they are required to hand in these firearms, but once we engage with them, they often cooperate. In many cases, they are willing to surrender the weapons.' [email protected]