Crime: Mbeki proven wrong
2007-12-6 20:35
Cape Town
Opposition parties have lamented the increases in crime detailed in the latest statistics for April to September, released on Thursday.
It was deplorable and made a mockery of Safety and Security Minister Charles Nqakula's assurances to business leaders, locally and overseas, that the crime rate was under control :D, DA spokesperson Diane Kohler-Barnard said.
House robbery - house break-ins that included violence - increased by seven percent, truck hijacking by 53.3%, and business robbery by 29.3%.
The police claim that incidents such as murder - which was down by 6.6% - rape, attempted murder and assault with intent to commit grievous bodily harm had decreased over the past six months.
"This may be the case, but it is important never to lose sight of the fact that a high number of cases are never reported to the police," Kohler-Barnard said.
By focusing exclusively on dropping or rising crime statistics over fixed periods of time, the SA Police Service failed to address the very real issue that a significant portion of the population did not even report crimes.
"Indeed, according to the AC Nielsen crime survey, 32% of crime victims interviewed failed to report the crime to the police, with 61% of those victims stating 'police inefficiency' as the reason."
Mbeki 'proven wrong'
The last Victims of Crime Survey stated that the reporting rate of crime was less than half of all crimes committed, Kohler-Barnard said.
Freedom Front Plus spokesperson Pieter Groenewald agreed, saying the statistics proved the public was not safe because of crime.
Last year there was an increase of 25.4% in house robberies and it now appeared to be still increasing.
President Thabo Mbeki's view that people were complaining unnecessarily about crime and it was merely a perception created by the media, had now been proven to be wrong.
"People are supposed to feel safe in their own homes, but the statistics indicate that it is increasingly unsafe in one's own home."
The public was therefore justified in complaining that crime was getting out of control and that South Africa was unsafe to live in, Groenewald said