Page 36 of 42 FirstFirst ... 26282930313233343536373839404142 LastLast
Results 526 to 540 of 619

Thread: SAPS discussion and news

  1. #526
    Senior Member playtym's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    9,569

    Default

    Cele condemns cop killings

    Johannesburg - The escalating number of police officers being killed in the line of duty is a national crisis, National Police Commissioner General Bheki Cele said on Sunday.
    "This is indeed a crisis. The rate at which our officers are being callously gunned down is extremely alarming," he said.
    Cele was responding to news that two police officers from Kraaifontein in the Western Cape were gunned down in the early hours of Sunday.
    At around 01:10, Warrant Officer Gurswin Matthee, 39, and Constable Cannon Cloete,23, were attending to a complaint at the corner of Pedro and Boesak Street when they were confronted at gunpoint.
    "This attack is a clear indication that there are cold-blooded criminals out there that have no value or thought for human life and we must deal with them doggedly," said Cele.
    He condemned the incident and called on communities to help police track down Matthee and Cloete's killers.
    "I have attended funerals of my police officers every weekend in the past four weeks and I cannot help but state that community outcry on the killing of our officers is seriously lacking."
    Cele urged the public to rally in support to prevent similar attacks from progressing.
    "I have called on all police officers throughout the country to continue with their work undeterred and vigilantly," he said.
    In the past three days, four police officers were killed while a fifth officer remains in a serious condition in hospital after a shooting in Creighton, KwaZulu-Natal on Friday.
    Police Minister, Nathi Mthethwa said that the ministry would ensure those responsible for the kililng of the police would be punished accordingly.
    "As the South African Police Service [SAPS], we are a family and when one of us loses his or her life as cowardly as it has happened it pains all of us. We however urge our members to continue in fighting crime fearlessly all within the framework of the law. This is a people’s war and in the end the people shall win this war."
    He said circumstances wherein police members lose their lives particularly being shot at by heartless criminals have now reached unacceptable levels. "These dedicated members lose their lives while protecting the nation. We shall never accept, nor allow this to continue because a killing of a single police officer robs the nation.
    “No amount of punishment to the scoundrels who murder our police can soften our hearts to accept these evil acts. We shall not allow a few criminals to murder our law enforcement officers, who in the first place lose their lives while protecting society."
    Mthethwa has urged society to work with police in arresting those responsible for killing the police.
    "The escalating number of police officers being killed in the line of duty is a national crisis."

    Crime is a national crisis. Far more civilians have been killed than police officers yet we never hear a peep out of this idiot when that happens, unless it's to reassure everyone that crime isn't out of control.


    "This attack is a clear indication that there are cold-blooded criminals out there that have no value or thought for human life and we must deal with them doggedly."

    That's right, Beke Cele, you're finally catching on to what every other South African already knows. Now all we need is for you to do is realise that it's your job to stop it and actually start doing something about it.

  2. #527
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by curious george View Post
    Police assault caught on camera

    2011-05-02 11:05

    Related Links













    Pretoria - Pretoria police officers have been caught on CCTV cameras kicking and punching an unarmed man, Beeld reported on Monday.

    Theuns Potgieter, 33, of Silverton had gone to a petrol station in Gezina around 21:00 on Thursday, April 21, to get two flat tyres repaired.

    He had his firearm tucked into the back of his pants, but did not have his licence with him.

    CCTV footage shows police officers arriving at the station and walking over to where Potgieter and his friend are talking to another man in the workshop area.

    "Even before they asked me I took out my gun and put it on the car's engine cover. The police told us to lie down. I raised my arms and lay down," he was quoted as saying.

    Resisting arrest

    Another man, presumably a plain-clothes policeman, then walks up to Potgieter and kicks him in the stomach several times as officers in uniform look on. He then stomps on his head, punches him in the face and kicks him in the stomach again.

    A uniformed officer then kicks Potgieter. While he is being handcuffed, the first policeman kicks him again. He was taken to the Pretoria Moot police station, accused of possession of an unlicensed firearm, pointing a firearm and resisting arrest.

    Potgieter was taken to hospital after vomiting blood and passing blood in his urine. After he was discharged he appeared in the Pretoria Magistrate's Court where he was released on bail of R2 000. While in custody, it was confirmed that he was the lawful owner of the gun.

    According to Potgieter, police refused to help him open an assault case against the officers.

    Gauteng police spokesperson Colonel Neville Malila told Beeld: "... such alleged conduct by police members cannot be tolerated".

    The matter was being viewed in a serious light and would be investigated, he said.

    Potgieter's beating was the third case of alleged police violence in two weeks. Last week Jeanette Odendaal was shot dead, allegedly by a police sergeant, as she sat in her car outside the Kempton Park police station, after apparently having bumped into a police van while parking.

    Andries Tatane was killed during a protest in Ficksburg. He was allegedly shot at point-blank range with rubber bullets and beaten with rubber truncheons.

    - SAPA
    The police at the Pretoria Moot police station refused to register his complaint that he was repeatedly kicked by a police-officer during his arrest… The Afrikaner was kept for six days in a police cell, was vomiting and passing blood in his urine after assaults…
    Theuns Potgieter falsely arrested, legal gun confiscated, brutally kicked by Pretoria SAPF April 21 2011
    When 33-year-old Afrikaner Theuns Potgieter of Silverton went to get two tyres fixed at a Gezina fuel-station with a friend on April 21 2011, at 21:14. he carried his legal handgun inserted in the back of his trousers. Suddenly a large number of police officers descended on the Afrikaner inside the fuel-station premises. He was kicked repeatedly in the stomach, handcuffed, his legally-registered gun confiscated. He needed treatment at hospital after his ordeal, which was recorded on CCTV… He was arrested for ‘resisting arrest’ and ‘having an illegal firearm’. Source: Hilda Fourie, Beeld.

    The footage shows that he did not resist arrest at any stage: “When I saw the uniformed men coming in, and before they even spoke to me I had already taken out my handgun and placed it on my car’s engine-cap, telling them that my firearm-registratiion license was legal, but was at home,’ he told Beeld newspaper.
    He en his friend Hendrik Grobler, 34, who had gone to the petrol-station with him that night, were both ordered to lie down on their stomachs. Beeld photographed the CCTV-footage which showed what happened next: a man in civilian clothing who had been with the police and had been seen talking to them outside the fuel-station just before they all descended on Potgieter, then walked up to the Afrikaner and kicked him hard, several times in the stomach. And then the unresisting Potgieter was arrested for ‘resisting arrest’ – while it could be clearly seen on the CCTV that he never did that , as well as for ‘possession of an unlicensed firearm.’ And while he was being handcuffed, the same man in civilian clothes kitcked him again.
    His friend Grobler, who had undergone back-surgery three weeks earlier, said he told the cops about this fact and that he was unable to lie down – they forced him to the ground anyway.
    Potgieter was taken to the Pretoria Moot police station, were he was kept in the police-cells until Tuesday, when he was granted bail of R2,000 at the Pretoria magistrate’s court. It’s not known exactly what he is going to be charged for: the CCTV-footage clearly showed that he did not resist arrest and moreover, he can prove that is gun is a legally-registered weapon. After his ordeal, Potgieter on Friday-afternoon was taken to hospital for an examination, as he had blood in his urine and was throwing up. The police refused to accept his complaint, refused to investigate his allegations that he was assaulted during his arrest, said Potgieter. SAPF colonel Neville Malila approached for comment by Beeld, professed to be ‘shocked and angry,’ acclaimed that ‘this were not the actions of the average police officer,’ and added that such incidents would be ‘would be investigated internally.”
    http://www.beeld.com/Suid-Afrika/Nuu...n-aan-20110501


    *follow-up article:
    http://www.beeld.com/Suid-Afrika/Nuu...am-is-20110524

    *Ok,to summarise this:

    One of the assualt victoms was carrying a backinjury/wearing a protective brace from op a few weeks before>He informs the cops of this(!),but they threaten to shoot him non the less,if he doesnt lie down.Two of them procede to hit/trample on his back(deliberately!),3rd cop comes and turns him over.......!45mins before medical help arrives.

    Looks like he might eventually be paralized,will lose his job,wife 7months preggers,WE inevitably get to pay now that the ICD eventually takes over the investigation from the SAPS....

  3. #528
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    *follow up article*

    Protector 'raid' cops cleared




    Related Links











    Johannesburg - The police officers who caused a stir at Public Protector Thuli Madonsela's office in March were on official business and have had their suspension lifted, the police said on Friday.

    "Our investigation was done and then a decision was made that the outcome was that they operated within their mandate as part of a wider investigation that they were doing," said police spokesperson McIntosh Polela.

    The two crime intelligence officials arrived at Madonsela's office in March without documentation supporting their request to see a memorandum related to her probe into a leasing tender for police headquarters in Pretoria.

    She had declared the R500m lease agreement for new police headquarters improper and the document they sought had been published in the Sunday Times.

    Apology


    At the time, Madonsela said it had also been part of a bundle supplied to her by the police for her investigation, so she could not understand why they wanted it.

    National police commissioner General Bheki Cele was among the figures mentioned in her final report, which found that the lease agreement was not legal.

    Cele apologised to Madonsela for the visit, saying he did not sanction it and would investigate.

    Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa, who was in France on an official visit at the time, also expressed concern, and said he had asked Cele to look into it.

    Polela said the police would not provide details of the investigation by the two officers.

    It was decided at the end of April to lift their suspension.

    "The decision to lift their suspension was after an investigation which included interviews with officials in crime intelligence and public works."

    Meeting

    Madonsela was expected to meet Public Works Minister Gwen Mahlangu-Nkabinde on Friday.

    Mahlangu-Nkabinde was cited as the responsible office-bearer in the public works aspect of Madonsela's lease probe.

    Her department is in charge of the state's property assets.

    Madonsela had called the arrival of the policemen at her office a "visit" but critics referred to it as a "raid".

    Comment was not immediately available from Madonsela.


    - SAPA

  4. #529
    Senior Member playtym's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    9,569

    Default Murders 'leave South Africa cold'

    'It's madness," said national police commissioner Bheki Cele, shaking his head furiously. "Police officers are fathers, mothers and they have hearts to love. People treat them as if they are ruthless and cold. The number of police already murdered this year is alarming."

    Every Saturday for the past five weeks Cele has flown in the country to attend funerals of members of the police killed in the line of duty.

    This week he flew to Cape Town to visit the devastated families of Warrant Officer Girshwin Matthee (39) and student constable Cannon Cloete (23), who were murdered in the early hours of last Sunday in Wallacedene, a teeming informal settlement in the city's eastern suburbs.

    The two men were on patrol when they were approached by a young woman who claimed she had been raped. "She took them to the shack where she said she was raped. As they arrived at the shack, they were both shot in the head.

    "To me, it appears to be an ambush. Their service pistols were stolen," Cele said.

    "We need to get to the truth from the young woman, to find out what really happened. She is being questioned, but she is a very young woman and we have to take care of her. We also have a number of leads but we are very sure we will crack the case."

    Just three days before these killings, Captain Sydney Bongani Hlengwa (46) and Constable Zamikhaya Patrick Hlangulela (32) were shot and killed during a raid on a shebeen in Creighton outside Durban.

    "This weekend I have to make a choice of which funeral to attend, because they are both being held on the same day," he said in an interview with the Mail & Guardian in his parliamentary office. Known for his sharp dress sense, Cele did not disappoint. Sporting a navy suit, blue and white striped shirt and black pointed shoes, he stood out from other politicians in the precinct.

    But when he dresses for another funeral this weekend he will put on his full ceremonial police uniform. According to police working with him, Cele has insisted that each murdered policeman and woman be given an official police funeral. It is also the first time, they say, that a leader of his stature has tried to attend every funeral.

    The fact that 36 police have been killed so far this year does not indicate a significant spike in the number of police killed.

    "I think in the last financial year we lost 88 police officers. The previous financial year we lost 110. Looking at it now, the suspicion is the systematic way it is happening," said Cele.

    "Crime is really reducing. It could be the response of criminals to the space being closed by the police. There is that kind of theory. Cash heists and bank robberies are not going down because the Holy Ghost has arrived in the hearts of the criminals. Perhaps they are firing back and feeling the squeeze."

    Police were now more visible on patrols, but the society they worked in was so violent it had become more difficult for them to protect themselves, Cele said.

    There was a feeling among the police that the killing of police force members did not get the coverage it deserved, said Cele. Instead, "police brutality" had become a favoured catchword of the press and the public had responded to this by not crying out when police were slain.

    Cele said the tragic death of Ficksburg service delivery protester Andries Tatane was not the norm and the perpetrators were facing serious charges.

    Elrena van der Spuy, a researcher at the Centre for Criminology at the University of Cape Town, said she was also concerned about the apparent apathy about police killings and the media had an enormous responsibility to raise awareness about the deaths of police.

    "The public needs to be educated about the complex business of policing and it is not brought to their attention. Police killings in democratic nations are considered absolutely unacceptable and an affront to the state. But here the public is lukewarm in its response to police deaths," she said.

    "Police killings tell us a lot about the state of policing. For example, the more organised crime networks become, the more police are targeted. It could be that there is an increasing access to firearms. It could be that the police are seen as another gang fighting for turf. It could signify a lack of respect for police."

    The vision of police gaining the support of communities and enjoying the consequent social authority had not been realised in South Africa, Van der Spuy said, and both the police and communities had contributed to this. "We need to start with not laughing at the fact that police get killed."

    Cele said police bosses met this week and would continue to do so, to discuss how to reduce police murders.

    Meanwhile, there were enough bullet-proof vests for every policeman. "The problem is usage of these bullet-proof vests. The big argument is that they are not user friendly. We have told station commanders to make sure to use them because they are there for their protection," he said.

    "At every parade in the morning everybody is wearing one but, as they work, they begin to take them off."

    Although most police killed in the line of duty were shot in the head, Cele said some were not wearing their vests when they were shot.

    The South African Police Union has called for an urgent summit of all stakeholders to come up with strategies and policies to curb the killings, and is also pushing for tougher legislation to deal with police killers.

    Cele said the remarks made by Susan Shabangu, the former deputy safety and security minister, in 2008 that police should "shoot to kill" criminals could not be blamed for the killing of police. "Everybody attributes the 'shoot to kill' phrase to Cele, but I never said it," he said.

    "We are policing in the world of a culture of human rights, constitutionality and the rule of law. Where South Africans have a right to protest and march, there are restrictions on what you do. The police must give protection to those that march and the same [protection must go for the] police."

    Partners feel the pain
    Candles flickered side by side at the Kraaifontein police station, standing beside framed portraits of the police officers senselessly gunned down last weekend.

    A private memorial service was held at the station on Wednesday morning to give angry police, men and women, the opportunity to pay their respects to their fallen colleagues. Clearly shocked by the events that had torn her life apart, the 21-year-old girlfriend of murdered student constable Cannon Cloete was too upset to talk about her boyfriend later that afternoon.

    Nataly Hendrick's fragile appearance brought tears to the eyes of veteran police men and women. In her arms, she carried her tiny son, Tyler, who was the mirror image of his dad, said his colleagues.

    In her home nearby Rochelle Matthee was surrounded by relatives as she tried to cope with her loss.

    Girshwin Matthee had been with the police force for 16 years and he was happy his wife was safely working behind a desk in police support services.

    His shattered widow will now have to raise their two young children, nine-year-old Chantè and 12-year-old Rochwin, alone and help his daughter by his first relationship, Elizna, 15, as they all come to terms with a life cut short in the most brutal way.
    While my deepest sympathies go out to the families of the fallen officers, I'd like to respond to the National Police Commissioner Mr General Bheki Cele by saying, "'It's madness, citizens are fathers, mothers and they have hearts to love. People treat them as if they don't matter. The number of citizens already murdered this year is alarming."

    It's your job to fix it. If you don't do it who do you think will?!? Stop whinging about it and do your job!

  5. #530
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    Cele urges cops to use maximum force

    Cele urges cops to use maximum force

    May 30 2011 at 12:29pm
    http://www.iol.co.za/sundayindepende...orce-1.1075735

    INSLA
    FINAL GOODBYE: National police commissioner General Bheki Cele and provincial police commissioner General Arno Lamoer look on as pallbearers carry the casket of slain Student Constable Cannon Cloete at his funeral. PICTURES: LEON LESTRADE



    LEILA SAMODIEN
    National police commissioner General Bheki Cele has called on officers to use maximum force in the war against criminals.

    Speaking at the funerals yesterday of slain Kraaifontein police officers Warrant Officer Gershwin Matthee and Student Constable Cannon Cloete, Cele said: “We are not calling for you to be dogs of war or to be wayward. Do your job. But if someone makes it difficult for you to do that job to a point where your life is in danger, use the tools we have given you. Defend yourself.”

    He said that, according to law, police officers were allowed to use “maximum force” in such situations. He also urged them to be “decisive” in their actions when defending themselves.

    Matthee, 39, and Cloete, 23, were gunned down while on patrol last Sunday and their firearms were stolen. A Khayelitsha man, Sivuyile Songovana, 23, appeared in court on Friday in connection with the murders, but the police are adamant he was not acting alone.

    To applause from the congregation at Cloete’s funeral, Cele said the police had been dragged into a “war” because so many policemen had been slain.
    HEARTBROKEN: Warrant Officer Gershwin Matthees wife Rochelle cries on the shoulder of their 12-year-old son at Matthees funeral in Northpine yesterday.
    INSLA


    A few days before Matthee and Cloete were murdered, two KwaZulu-Natal officers were killed in a shooting in Creighton.

    Cele said this had been the fifth Saturday in a row that he had attended the funerals of police officers.

    “The youth are at war. You can’t have 23-year-olds killing 23-year-olds; that is a crisis,” said Cele, referring to Songovana’s arrest.

    “Almost seven police have been killed in the months since January. It’s a crisis.”
    Cloete, who’d barely begun his career, would have become a fully fledged constable on July 12.

    Rows of police officers, friends and family packed the church hall in Kraaifontein, forcing some mourners to stand in the back and line the walls.

    Cloete’s uncle, Robbie Robertson, said he had had a great love for his family and community. “He had a passion for his work and he was proud, especially when he was in his blue uniform,” he said.

    Pienaar said: “Although he was young, he left a legacy behind, and that is the commitment he had to change the life and community in Kraaifontein.”

    While the police fraternity bid farewell to Cloete, they also mourned the loss of an established policeman yesterday.

    Matthee’s funeral was the first of the day and the Church of St Andrew in Northpine – only about 1km from where Cloete’s service would be held – was barely big enough for the mourners. Among them were Western Cape police commissioner Arno Lamoer and provincial MEC for Community Safety Albert Fritz.

    Captain Nikolas Pienaar, the two officers’ immediate commander, said Matthee’s service to the community, as well as his commitment to training younger police officers, had been outstanding.

    “He served the community with dignity. He was a good person to work with, and he was a warrant officer I and the police station could depend on.”

    Thomas Matthee said his brother had made it his life’s quest to serve and protect his community. “He could make one laugh and be happy and he always saw the lighter side of things.”

  6. #531
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    Interesting perspective on cop killing crisis

    Excellent article

    http://www.news24.com/MyNews24/YourS...d-Out-20110530

    The headlines over the past couple of weeks have been focussed on the issue of cop killings. A News24 article titled Govt stance on cop killings welcomed gave the grim details:

    "This year alone, reports indicate an increase in the number of slain officers, with the number standing at 32 dead since January."

    "Other statistics show that about 109 police officers were killed between 2008 and 2009 while 110 were killed between 2009 and 2010."

    Although I firmly welcome the concern shown by government, I am a bit concerned about the lack of concern shown by government regarding other matters, for instance:

    1. Friday morning’s front page of the Sowetan read "Anti-rape cops bust... on rape charge".

    This was about two policemen that had given a lecture to a school on child abuse. These same cops then raped one of the scholars some time afterwards. Apparently, since 2009, 47 officers have been investigated for rape. Bearing in mind that in SA there is an extremely low conviction rate for criminals and very few victims report rape, statistics say around 90% of rapes are not reported.

    2. Our police chief Bheki Cele called the killing of police officers "a crisis".

    Taking into account that more farmers are murdered than police officers and the fact that somewhere between 48 (Saps figures) and 89 (Interpol figures) South Africans are killed PER DAY in South Africa, why is this now a crisis?


    3. Reports suggest that in the last ten months of 2010, 566 people died in police custody. Keep in mind that these are mostly unarmed people dying at the hands of armed officers compared to a few dozen officers being killed by armed criminals. According to the TRC, 75 people died in police custody during Apartheid. Since 94 the figures have increased alarmingly.

    4. Adding to the above points, we have widespread cases of bribery involving police officers, we have police officers involved in farm murders and drug related crimes, we have guns disappearing from police stations and dockets magically disappearing.

    Maybe these cop killings might have some link to the level of skills and training within the police force. Even if this is not true, there is a clear bias by government when speaking out against certain issues and they clearly show favour to certain groups. Maybe if they government stopped denying that we have a major crime crisis and focussed on drastically reducing the crime rate, removing scum from the Saps and properly training these guys then surely we would have less cop killings.

    To close, my condolences to all those who have lost their lives, whether it be a victim of crime or a police man or woman that has died in the line of duty.

    I also noted one of the comments below from a Tammara points to something close to our hearts, civilian disarmamanet

  7. #532
    Senior Member baboon6's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Johannesburg, South Africa
    Posts
    2,224

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by curious george View Post

    Cele urges cops to use maximum force
    So I suppose we'll see even more innocent people killed by these scumbags...

  8. #533
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    http://www.peherald.com/news/article/1537

    Crucial murder witness executed 31 May 2011




    Gareth Wilson
    wilsong@avusa.co.za
    A CRUCIAL eyewitness who was due to testify against two Nelson Mandela Bay police officers accused of murdering a Somali shop owner earlier this year has been shot dead execution- style.
    The cold-blooded murder of Alli Abdul Omaar, 30, at his shop, the Small Pot Supermarket in Kulati Street, Kwazakhele, on Sunday evening came days after another eyewitness, Abdullah Mohammed Sheik, was beaten unconscious after being pulled off the road by two balaclava-clad men last week.
    Both Omaar and Sheik were due to testify against Tactical Response Team (TRT) members Constables Dumisani Tshezi and Mawanda Tolom. The officers are charged with the murder of Somali Osman Nuur Mohamed, 39, in February. Tshezi and Tolom were both released on R1000 bail in April.
    Mohamed was beaten unconscious when nine police officials raided the Small Pot Supermarket. The officers loaded Mohamed into their police vehicle and left him in the holding cells at Kwazakhele police station, where he died from his injuries. Because police officers were involved, the matter was transferred to the SAPS Independent Complaints Directorate (ICD) for criminal investigation.
    A month later, the two TRT constables were arrested and charged with murder.
    Colonel Jackie Grobler, commander of the Trio Task Team which only investigates serious and violent crimes, said in the latest killing, six men had walked into the shop and forced three Somali store employees to lie on the ground before confronting Omaar.
    “One gunman then went to the counter where Omaar was sitting and shot him in the throat,” he said. “They fled in a vehicle parked nearby.”
    Grobler said they were investigating all angles related to the attack, including the possibility that TRT officers had been involved. “At this stage, we cannot reveal specific information as it could jeopardise the case.”
    Store employee Ilmi Abdi Ilmi, 22, said the gunmen had stormed the shop and gone straight to Omaar, calling him “the witness”. “They said to him: ‘You are the witness. Witness, give me the money’,” Ilmi said. “These people were sent to kill him as they were only concerned with him, no one else. Even when they left, they only took a small amount of money.”
    Ilmi said before Omaar could answer the gunman who had called him “the witness”, he had been shot in the throat.
    Last Tuesday, Sheik was forced off the road by an unidentified vehicle and attacked while on his way from Veeplaas to Booysen Park. In a panic, Sheik abandoned his car and fled.
    Two balaclava-clad men chased after him and beat him unconscious, leaving him for dead on the side of the road. Nothing was stolen during the attack.
    Grobler said it was believed the same vehicle had been used in both incidents.
    The police contacted the ICD yesterday and asked that Sheik be placed in witness protection. “He needs to testify because if there is corruption of this calibre he is a crucial witness," one officer said.
    “We cannot place him in protective custody as it is an ICD case and the decision lies with them.”
    An ICD investigator, who did not want to be named as he is not authorised to speak to the media, said he was on his way to Port Elizabeth to assess the situation. “We will decide if he [Sheik] must go into protective custody.”
    Motherwell cluster commander Major-General Johan Kapp said due to the seriousness of the case, it had been allocated to the Trio Task Team to investigate.
    Somali Association spokesperson Suleiman Hussein said he was certain the attacks on both witnesses were linked.
    “I have no doubt Omaar's death is linked to the first murder in February. How else would the gunmen know he was a witness?” he said.
    “Because of this, all Somalis are now scared to testify in criminal cases as they fear becoming targets.”
    Mohamed’s murder case is with the Department of Public Prosecutions waiting for a trial date to be decided on.


    *bad boys bad boys,what you gona do when come for you.......*

  9. #534
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    ICD probing 6 000 cases against police



    2011-06-02 14:41










    http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/Ne...olice-20110602







    Pretoria - The Independent Complaints Directorate is investigating an estimated 6 000 cases against the police, the ICD's executive director Francois Beukman said in Pretoria on Thursday.

    Addressing the National Press Club, Beukman said that of the 6 000 cases, he estimated that 2 500 were criminal cases.

    ICD spokesperson Moses Dlamini said 40% of the cases were criminal matters, the majority of which were crimes such as assault, murder, attempted murder and assault occasioning grievous bodily harm.

    Dlamini said that very often police training came up as an issue during such cases.




    - SAPA

    *154 615 cops,so that makes it 1 in 25 under investigation!!!*

  10. #535
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    *Remember this incident:

    http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums...=1#post5584324
    http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums...=1#post5593045

    *Well,guess what:
    http://www.thedailymaverick.co.za/ar...tatane-killing

    Veil of silence shrouds witness's arrest in Tatane killing

    Molefi Nonyane, the man who cradled Andries Tatane as he lay dying, has been arrested by Bloemfontein police and allegedly denied access to his lawyer. It's a particularly worrying development, as he was due to appear in court in Ficksburg as a key witness in the case against eight policemen accused of Tatane’s murder. Community activists said they did not know where Nonyane was and were concerned for his safety. By MANDY DE WAAL.


    Molefi Nonyane was due to appear in court in Ficksburg, Free State, on Thursday morning with the eight policemen charged with Tatane’s murder, but was nowhere to be seen. He had apparently been arrested early on Wednesday evening, 1 June.

    The last time I saw Molefi he was handcuffed like me,” said Pseliso Mpekoa, who was arrested with Nonyane after he tried to persuade the police not to take Nonyane away. “We were arrested by a special task force team from Bloemfontein. We weren’t even arrested by local police,” said Mpekoa. He said he was charged with interfering with police in the execution of their duties.

    “I was taken to Ficksburg police station, but Molefi was taken to Bloemfontein. Our lawyer has tried to see him, but the police refuse to speak to our lawyer about Molefi at all.”

    All efforts by the Daily Maverick to confirm Nonyane’s arrest and get comment from South African Police Services spokespeople in Pretoria, Ficksburg and Bloemfontein proved fruitless on Thursday and no statements had yet been issued. The duty station commander in Ficksburg refused to comment on the case and referred the Daily Maverick to regional spokespeople, none of whom answered or returned our calls.

    In reporting on the arrests, Eyewitness News earlier quoted community representative Ncebakazi Manzi, who alleged police were trying to intimidate witnesses to Andries Tatane’s death.

    The SABC broadcast the events on television, showing Tatane being beaten by uniformed police and being shot, apparently with a rubber bullet, at point-blank range. Tatane subsequently died in Nonyane’s arms.

    Manzi told Eyewitness News, “Nonyane and Mpekoa were arrested by two policemen in private cars who apparently refused to identify themselves. The situation is very suspect and obviously it must have something to do with the court hearing today.”

    Eyewitness News reported that police had confirmed the arrests, but had not offered any information about what charges were being brought against either Nonyane or Mpekoa.

    Molefi is the main witness in our case and just a day before his appearance in court he is arrested,” said Mpekoa. “We had lawyers last night to come to talk to the police, but Molefi was not allowed to speak to the lawyer. They kept us separate. He did not appear in court, unless he appeared in court in another town that we don’t know about. I am worried about him.”

    Both Nonyane and Mpekoa are active leaders of the Meqheleng Concerned Citizen’s Movement which has protested against police violence during previous court hearings related to the Tatane murder. Eight members of the SAPS appeared in court on Thursday, when the case was postponed until 14 June.

    Volksblad journalist Willem van der Berg, who was present in court, said the hearing took place under heavy police guard. “All eight policemen charged were in court, but there were a lot of other police in court as well. There was a strong police presence outside the courtroom.”

    The police made sure no one took photographs or had a mobile phone in their hands. Somebody wanted to send an SMS and the police immediately told him to stop and put his mobile phone away,” said Van der Berg, who added a court order prohibiting photographs being taken of the accused was still in effect.

    “Outside the court there were a lot of riot police keeping an eye on people who were singing and protesting. About 50 people were singing and dancing and holding placards which mostly read that they hated the police, the municipality or the government,” said Van der Berg.

    The police ordered the crowd to stop singing and dancing outside the court, and warned them that if they didn’t stop, the police would fire tear gas at them in 30 seconds. Some people ran away, but others stood their ground.”

    Many in the crowd waited until Mpekoa walked out of the court room. “The crowd went crazy when he walked out. They just started singing and going mad,” said Van der Berg.

    Mpekoa said that subsequent to Tatane’s death tensions between police and members of the Meqheleng community had been high. “We have been trying to build relations with the police, but after (Nonyane’s arrest) yesterday the hatred and the anger is back,” he says. “People don’t want the police again. The animosity continues to grow instead of us healing the community.”

    He said the granting of bail to the eight accused had fuelled tensions. “The community is sad,” says Mpekoa. “The fact that the police were first denied bail and then later granted bail in Bloemfontein without us even knowing about it, without the family being advised, is very sad. We should have been informed. We only knew about this when we learnt of it through the news. This makes the community think the police are getting special treatment or that they are getting things specially done for them.”

    UPDATE: Captain Dlamini, an SAPS spokesperson, says that Molefi Nonyane was arrested after an old fraud charge against him was reopened. Dlamini says the charge relates to a case that the police opened against Nonyane in 2008. Nonyane is being held in Bloemfontein but was arrested in Ficksburg. Captain Dlamini says: "Nonyane is being held in Bloemfontein because his crime was committed in Bloemfontein. I can't comment on his lawyer not being able to speak to him. I don't know anything about that. He will have a bail hearing tomorrow (Friday) at the Bloemfontein magistrate's court." DM

    *Zimbabwe,here we come?*

  11. #536
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    Shabangu linked to new police lease - report

    2011-06-03 12:03

    Related Links











    Johannesburg - Businessman Roux Shabangu has been linked to another multimillion-rand police lease deal for a building twice the size required by government, according to a report on Friday.

    The R137m lease for a building in the Pretoria CBD was to house the police department's Independent Complaints Directorate, the Mail & Guardian reported.

    The 10-year lease, which the M&G said it had seen, was signed in April 2009 by the department of public works.

    Public Protector Thuli Madonsela is investigating another lease agreement involving a new police office in Durban after completing a similar probe in Pretoria.

    Both deals involve Shabangu, National Police Commissioner General Bheki Cele, and the public works department.

    Shabangu's business partner Japie van Niekerk told the M&G Shabangu bought the building in Vermeulen Street as his political connections told him public works wanted to lease it.

    Van Niekerk lent Shabangu the money to buy the building.

    Tender process unclear


    Neither Shabangu nor the department commented on the allegations.

    Shabangu's company, Majestic Silver Trading 275, reportedly bought the building from property owner Sayed Mia in September 2008 for R23m.

    Shabangu and Van Niekerk "mysteriously transferred it between them twice" and the building ended up owned by Majestic Silver for an escalated price of R41.8m. Shabangu owed this to Van Niekerk's company.

    In terms of the lease agreement, government would pay Shabangu R729 280 a month for the first year, escalating by 10% a year.

    It was not clear whether public works put it out to open tender before signing the lease.

    ICD spokesperson Moses Dlamini told the newspaper he did not know whether an open tender process was followed, but the ICD had submitted a needs assessment and budget to public works.

    The ICD needed 3 668m² of space, with 105 parking bays, at a budget of R6.2m for the first year of the lease.

    The Vermeulen Street building gives them 7 614m² and 102 bays, costing R8.8m in the first year.

    - SAPA

    *no wonder the anc is hellbent on shutting down the media:corruption,police brutality,witnesses disappearing/murdered.These guys are bigger criminals than what the apartheid bunch could ever hope to have been!!!*

  12. #537
    Senior Member Dinges's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Stll inside the onion
    Age
    39
    Posts
    3,317

    Default

    Crooked cops, rookies tipped for upgrades

    Conditional promotions list also names dead officers

    Jun 5, 2011 12:57 AM | By PREGA GOVENDER

    April's promotions to the rank of lieutenant, captain and major have left scores of dedicated policemen fuming at being overlooked .

    A KwaZulu-Natal detective with 20 years' experience said members at his station had done "the barest minimum" after the list came out because they were "demotivated and demoralised".
    "I have a Bachelor of Commerce degree in management, yet hundreds with only a matric have been promoted. We have been short-changed," he said.

    A criminal conviction or pending criminal or disciplinary case disqualifies officers from promotion. But some, particularly those from KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape, were identified for promotion anyway. They include:

    • Thulasizwe Mngunyana, a member of the Mariannhill public order policing unit, outside Durban, who was convicted for the possession of an unlicensed firearm and ammunition in the Scottburgh Magistrate's Court in 2004;
    • Warrant Officer Shamila Singh from the Dundee police station in northern KwaZulu-Natal, who has a case pending against her for allegedly stealing exhibits; and
    • Port Shepstone policeman, Mokoena Susha, who was arrested last month after he was allegedly found driving a stolen car.

    Mngunyana confirmed his conviction for possession of an unlicensed firearm and ammunition, but said he "deserved his promotion".

    Dundee police station commissioner Colonel SP Makhubu confirmed that there was a pending disciplinary case against Singh over the alleged stolen exhibits.
    Said Susha: "It's being blown out of proportion because of this promotion. It's not like I stole this vehicle." Susha, who has been in the police for 28 years, including 17 years as a warrant officer, was driving a friend's car at the time of arrest.

    Police officers are also dumbfounded after the name of a former orderly at the Scottburgh Magistrate's Court, DN Khumalo, was included on the list - although he died in March last year.

    The names of those who have resigned or are due for retirement soon have also crept into the list, including that of Inspector Johan van Jaarsveld, a former East London policeman, who resigned in October last year.

    The name of a warrant officer attached to a satellite police station in East London's Duncan Village, who retires in six months, is also on the Eastern Cape list.

    Police spokesman Vishnu Naidoo said a process was under way "to determine the suitability of the members" who had made the list in spite of their having pending cases, criminal convictions or performance concerns.
    "The promotion of members not found suitable will not become effective," he said.

    The South African Policing Union's Western Cape provincial secretary, Graham Daniels, said some who did not meet the service criteria were on the list .
    "Somebody with five years' service is on the list," he said. Those eligible for promotion to captain had to have a minimum of 12 years' service as a warrant officer while those in line for a lieutenant's post had to have been a warrant officer for a minimum of eight years.
    http://www.timeslive.co.za/local/art...d-for-upgrades

  13. #538
    Senior Member playtym's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    9,569

    Default

    Robbers beaten to death

    Johannesburg - Two men were beaten to death by local Zimbane community members, after stealing a gun and attempting to rob a shop, Mthatha police said on Wednesday.
    "We strongly condemn the killings as this showed that members of the community continue to take law into their hands," Captain Alfred Zamukulungisa Jozana said.
    The men, aged 22 and 27, were in the process of robbing the shop on Tuesday night when they were taken outside and beaten.
    "This happens all the time in Mthatha. In this case the people knew the men.
    "They were angry that incidents like this continued to happen in their own town."
    A murder case has been opened and no arrests have yet been made.
    "We strongly condemn the killings as this showed that members of the community continue to take law into their hands," Captain Alfred Zamukulungisa Jozana said.

    Well, Captain, if you and your fellow officers would take the law into your hands the community members wouldn't have to.
    This is only happening because the community members have had enough of the out of control crime in this country as well as the inability/unwillingness of the SAPS to do anything about it.

  14. #539
    Senior Member playtym's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    9,569

    Default

    Ex-cop guilty of robbing drunk driver

    Cape Town - A former Cape Town policeman was on Wednesday effectively jailed for two years for drawing R1 200 from a drunk driving suspect's bank account, and stealing his cellphone.
    Thabiso Sigwebedlana, 34, formerly based at the Goodwood police station, collapsed in the dock of the Bellville Specialised Commercial Crime Court as Magistrate Amrith Chabilall ****ounced him guilty on two counts of theft.
    Chabilall said Sigwebedlana and a colleague had been on patrol together one night in March last year, and arrested a suspect outside a nightclub on a drunken driving charge.
    Sigwebedlana confiscated the man's cellphone and wallet. In the early hours, he used his bank card to draw the money at an ATM.

    Chabilall rejected Sigwebedlana's claim that he gave the wallet to the suspect's uncle at the police station, and that the uncle drew the money from an ATM.
    Sigwebedlana had during the investigation denied possession of the missing cellphone, but when it was later found at his home, he claimed he had forgotten it in his trouser pocket.
    "As much as a vulture would behave, so have you behaved - you were ready to grab at whatever presented itself," Chabilall told him.
    I'm glad to hear he's an "ex" cop. The force is definitely better off without this individual.

  15. #540
    Member curious george's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Eastern Cape.RSA
    Posts
    384

    Default

    Locnville to 'expose police brutality'

    Originally Posted by News24.com
    Cape Town - Popular South African pop group Locnville say that they want to expose police brutality in the country after they were allegedly assaulted by police in Cape Town in the early hours of Thursday morning.

    "Please understand we're not being selfish, we want to expose police brutality as a whole - for everyone who's been affected!" the group - made up of twin brothers Andrew and Brian Chaplin - tweeted at around 6am on Thursday as they kept fans informed of the incident.

    "If u doubted that the world is ****ed! My brother just got maced in the face by police
    officers!!!!! What the ****????" one of the brothers posted on the social networking site.

    'What happened to South Africa????'

    Minutes later bandmember Andrew Chaplin cleared up which of the twin brothers had been maced.

    "Brian was maced and our best friend punched in the face by the face by the ****ing police!!!!! Can you believe it????? What happened to South Africa????" [sic] they posted on their Facebook fan page.

    Their anger continued in a series of impassioned tweets:
    "As far as ive seen! All the cops do is protect and serve tyranny!!!" [sic] they
    tweeted soon after.

    This message was followed by a stream of responses from fans and followers who appeared to take issue with the band criticising the country as a whole.

    "obviously hasty words are said, we never dissed SA! this is home! [sic]" they tweeted in response to a fan.

    The band claim that their attempts to lay a formal complaint against the Claremont Police Station were unsuccessful. "We called the police station and tried to lay a formal complaint but they kept hanging up on us numerous times," Andrew Chaplin told Eyewitness News.

    -
    Channel24



    Source: http://www.channel24.co.za/Music/New...ality-20110609

    *if you are wondering,yes grandkids or something of Charlie Chaplin...*








Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •