DA calls on Metro Police to protect eThekwini residents

Issued by Councillor Sharmaine Sewshanker – DA eThekwini Councillor
12 Oct 2022 in Press Statements

The DA in eThekwini calls on Metro police to get their act together and focus on delivering on their core mandate, which is to protect the residents of this city instead of making headlines for all the wrong reasons.

The head of Metro Police, Steven Middleton has confirmed there is a shortage of Metro Police with 500 new recruits only being fully operational by June 2023.

Residents of eThekwini municipality are feeling helpless and frustrated by the lack of visible policing by Metro police. While crime escalates out of control in the absence of by-law enforcement, it is very evident that the city’s law enforcement unit can’t provide protection to the ratepayers of eThekwini, much like during last year’s July riots.

With bloated overtime budgets, the excuse of being under resourced has become as conspicuous as their absence in times of need. The emergency call centre staff often exhibit an inability to accurately log and filter through complaints, this is becoming a nightmare for eThekwini residents in need of emergency assistance.

The unit is fast losing control of by-law enforcement while more hours and manpower is spent on issuing parking tickets and providing protection services instead of crime prevention and visible policing.

Taxis have converted multiple corners of eThekwini into ranks without consequence management and public disturbance continues to the early hours of the morning. Muggings and robberies are on the increase as by-law violations are flaunted. There is a clear absence of real leadership and political will within the unit while lawlessness around the city spirals out of control.

We need to be proactive as a city and not reactive. The new recruits should be strategically deployed around the city’s crime hot spot areas as a form of deterrent for would be criminals. We need visible policing, patrolling and prevention of crime.