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Western Cape in the grip of violent crime crisis

Theolin Tembo|Published

The top five stations for contact crime were Mfuleni (Western Cape), Nyanga (Western Cape), Delft (Western Cape), Inanda (KwaZulu-Natal) and Kraaifontein (Western Cape).

Image: Ayanda Ndamane African News Agency (ANA)

“Communities are tired of PowerPoint policing. During the G20, visiting foreigners were better protected by our own SAPS and SANDF than we were and are.”

These were the words of civil group, Fight Against Crime, following the release of the crime statistics covering offences recorded during the first two quarters of the current financial year, from April 2025 to June 2025 and July 2025 to September 2025, respectively.

The Western Cape and Northern Cape recorded increases in contact crimes, with rises of 183 and 146 cases, respectively.

Gauteng contributed the highest share of national contact crime, with 26.4%, followed by the Western Cape, 18%, KwaZulu-Natal, 17.4% and the Eastern Cape, 10.6%.

The top five stations for contact crime were Mfuleni (Western Cape), Nyanga (Western Cape), Delft (Western Cape), Inanda (KwaZulu-Natal) and Kraaifontein (Western Cape).

All three months of the quarter - July, August and September recorded decreases in murder. Only the Western Cape (up 97) and Northern Cape (up 1) showed increases. On a per capita basis, both the Eastern Cape and Western Cape recorded about 15 murders per 100,000 people.

The top five murder stations were Mfuleni (Western Cape), Kraaifontein (Western Cape), Delft (Western Cape), Gauteng, and Gugulethu (Western Cape).

Fight Against Crime, said: “Gangsters clocking in and out like it’s a normal 9-to-5. Numbers can say whatever they want, but our streets (are) still telling the real story. Stop playing with stats and start playing defence. Communities are tired of PowerPoint policing.”

Cape Flats Safety Forum chairperson, Abie Isaacs, said the stats don't “reflect the daily reality our communities face”.

“We have noted the same police stations have once again ranked high on the national list when it comes to contact crimes. We have further noted that the main weapons used in these crimes are guns.

“We call on the premier to declare the Cape Flats a state of disaster, as it's in his mandate. Version 1 of his safety plan failed. We call on the SANDF to be deployed as a force multiplier, for a probe to be set up to look into gun violence, and we call on political parties not to politicise crime, as we have recently again seen this notion.

“It can no longer be business as usual while we have urban terror on the Cape Flats.

GOOD secretary-general, Brett Herron, said the stats reveal a province in deep crisis.

“From Delft to Mfuleni to Kraaifontein, entire families and neighbourhoods are being terrorised. Mfuleni has already recorded 156 murders across Q1 and Q2, a staggering 61.4% of last year’s total murders at the station, reached in just six months.

“The broader picture is just as alarming. Last year, the Western Cape recorded a total of 4,467 murders. In only half a year, the province has already reached 2,308 murders, 51.6% of last year’s total. We are only six months in.

“This surge is even more shocking when viewed against the national trend, where the country has recorded a decrease in murders. While South Africa moves forward, the Western Cape is falling further behind,” he said.

Premier Alan Winde said cooperative and locally-managed policing programmes are reducing murder rates and urgently need to be funded by national government.Winde said that they noted that the majority of the murders in the Western Cape are gun-related, but, along with the City, they have long been calling for investigative powers on firearms.

“Our success with LEAP now adds urgency and credibility to this request - we can get illegal guns off our streets.”

“We have always been willing to work with national government to address this crisis. We must continue to build on the constructive relationship we have built with Minister Cachalia and his team. But now the Minister and his colleagues in national government’s Justice and Security Cluster need to do more and make the hard decisions.”

Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said there is an urgent need to up the conviction rate for gang, gun and drug crime.

“These latest crime stats make it clear that violent crime continues to plague some of our most vulnerable communities, with gang activity being a common denominator for Cape Town precincts in the top 30 stations nationally for murder.

“We do take heart in the consecutive declines in murder across both quarters in Nyanga, Philippi East, and Khayelitsha – these are all areas where our LEAP officers are deployed to support SAPS.

“The Acting Police Minister has the power to change this situation in various ways. That includes urgent resourcing of SAPS and, most immediately, expanding the draft municipal policing power regulations issued by his department for public comment earlier this year.” Hill-Lewis said.