Members of the South African National Defence Force were deployed in Tafelsig to assist the South African Police Service in tackling crime in the area.
Image: Armand Hough / Independent Newspapers
Cape Flats communities say Operation Prosper has so far been a serious disappointment as gangs continue their operations even with the SANDF present.
Operation Prosper is a joint operation between the police and the South African National Defence Force (SANDF), launched by President Cyril Ramaphosa to clamp down on entrenched gang activity, illegal mining, extortion and violent crime.
During his State of the Nation Address on February 12, Ramaphosa outlined plans for the SANDF to be deployed across nine provinces hardest hit by serious and violent crime, with a specific focus on stabilising gang-ridden hotspot areas identified through crime intelligence.
The operation is expected to run for a full year to address the ongoing challenges of gang violence.
The South African National Defence Force said its deployment on the Cape Flats is having an impact with several guns confiscated and arrests made.
Image: Armand Hough / Independent Newspapers
Presidential spokesperson, Vincent Magwenya, said a report on the operation is being compiled for the president.
“On Operation Prosper, my understanding is that a report is being prepared to give an update on progress and how that operation is unfolding. I also understand that the report, or parts of that report, will be shared with you, as the media. Let me not preempt that process at this stage.
“It's been a month or so since the deployment, and I guess, depending on how you look at it, one has to say, you're dealing with very well entrenched criminal syndicates that are at play here,” Magwenya said.
“The majority of whom are involved in some form of illicit crime, and you're not going to expect them to just disappear so quickly.
“If anything, you can expect some form of resistance, or you can expect them to try to find other creative ways to dodge law enforcement. We need to be cautious with the manner in which we judge this operation so early on, when it's an operation that has been committed for 12 months,” Magwenya said.
The Mitchell's Plain Community Policing Forum's Linda Jones, said she does not really see an improvement or a reduction in criminal activities.
“My understanding was that the joint operation would be done jointly, and sometimes you see the army van standing here or passing by. I have seen how they just drive past men standing on corners without (conducting) stop and searches, to be very brutally honest.
“I think that money could have been put to better use to fix the resources of SAPS, such as employing more intelligence services, improving the lives of those living on the streets and in doing so alleviating crime,” Jones said.
“Them driving up and down in hot spot areas has little to no impact. Gangs still do their operations even with them around. There is no fear or respect. Bodies are still found in open fields.
“We might hear here and there people are saying it is good to just see them, but we don’t need to see them. We need tangible change and reduction,” Jones said.
Fight Against Crime spokesperson Jay Jay Idel said Operation Prosper has been a serious disappointment.
“Between April 6 and May 3, 2026, FACSA recorded approximately 238 serious incidents across the flats through our community-based reporting platform. 67 involving fatalities or serious injuries, 48 involving critical violence, and over 131 still being classified.
“These are community-reported figures and official records may differ, but they reflect what people on the ground are actually living through while government pats itself on the back for showing up,” Idel said.
“Hanover Park, Manenberg, Heideveld, Mitchells Plain, Delft. The same areas. The same names. The same bloodshed. Gang shootings, retaliation attacks and drive-bys didn't stop because soldiers arrived. They continued, right through the deployment.
“The SANDF presence has not been anywhere near the scale needed, and the government knows it. There may have been some psychological relief seeing boots on the ground, but relief doesn't bury the dead. The sustained reduction in violence that communities were promised simply has not happened,” Idel said.
Cape Times
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