Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Bye Bye Shebeen... Hello Happiness

Since police have cracked down even harder on shebeens, wives in Masiphumelele and Ocean View say they are happy to have their husbands home over weekends and that the money usually spent on liquor is being brought home instead, reports trauma counsellor Afia Emandien. (from IOL)

The Station Commissioner, Superintendant Jayce Naidoo said that in the past, the rate of contact crimes around shebeens had been very high.

But since many illegal shebeens had been closed down, including several shut down in a joint effort with the Community Police Forum and Bambanani volunteers, Naidoo said these crimes had decreased substantially.

He said all of the shebeens in Masiphumelele were illegal, and many of them were crime generators.

Western Cape Shebeen Association, which has about 12 000 members, will march to Parliament on Tuesday, demanding better treatment and to voice their grievances regarding the Western Cape Liquor Act.

They will demand that they be allowed to trade freely, and not be restricted in the quantities they buy from retailers or wholesalers.

12000 criminals going to speak to the criminals in charge - I am sure that they will find a lot of common ground.

Monday, January 26, 2009

New Regulations - No Comment?

Seems like the government has been doing a sterling job communicating with the "stakeholders" - as usual

The public have until Friday to submit comments on draft regulations under the Western Cape Liquor Act. (from IOL)

Only five submissions had been received, MEC for Finance, Economic Development and Tourism Garth Strachan said.


MEC Garth Strachan said, "I don't think we can deal with unemployment by running illegal shebeens.

"Alcohol abuse is one of the leading causes of crime."

Friday, January 23, 2009

Cartel link to SAA bust?

Crime intelligence operatives have arrested two people in connection with a multimillion-dollar international drug-smuggling syndicate that uses airlines to traffic narcotics across the world. (Stated as fact!!!) (From IOL)

It is hoped that Thursday's arrests of a security guard at OR Tambo International Airport and an SAA crew member, caught smuggling millions of rands worth of narcotics into Heathrow Airport earlier in the week, have cracked open the suspected west African drug cartel.

Police spokesperson Superintendent Tummi Golding said: "Our intelligence shows that the two are part of a larger syndicate which we strongly suspect has operatives in airlines and at airports to help smuggle drugs across the world.

"We believe that this consignment of drugs was part of a larger stash of narcotics which was destined for the United Kingdom and other European countries," she said, adding that the syndicate was believed to be linked to a west African country that has links to drug cartels across the world." (All of a sudden it's just a bunch of suspicions!)

Cartel - a consortium of independent organizations formed to limit competition by controlling the production and distribution of a product or service; "they set up the trust in the hope of gaining a monopoly" Do the people in this "cartel" really hope to control the supply and price of drugs in London with 50kg's of cannabis and 4kg's of cocaine? Or is this just more sensationalist nonsense?

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Covert Operation launched in 50kg Heathrow Bust

SAPS Crime Intelligence spokesperson Senior Superintendent Tummi Golding said both South African and British police were trying to ascertain how the bags got through security checks at OR Tambo. (from IOL)

She said the crew members would be monitored by Interpol while in South Africa.

The matter was regarded as extremely serious, and an intensive covert operation by the Crime Intelligence Unit is under way, she added.
(A covert operation is covert because it is secret? No?)

The SAA crew, including three pilots, arrested in London on suspicion of drug trafficking and detained for 24 hours have been released on bail until March 23.

The crew of flight SA234 were arrested at Heathrow Airport on Tuesday after 50kg of cannabis with a street value of R2,1-million (150 000 pound) and 4kg of cocaine



Tuesday, January 20, 2009

SAA crew bust with 50kg of SA's finest

Fifteen crew members of an SAA flight were arrested at London's Heathrow Airport on Tuesday after the UK Border Agency found 50kg of dagga in their possession. (from IOL)

The agency said in a statement that the dagga was discovered in three pieces of baggage that had arrived on the South African Airways flight from Johannesburg.

Operation Cobra...

More than R250 000 worth of liquor has been confiscated and more than R38 000 in 37 fines dished out in the past six months from 160 raids - successes that Cape Town's special units hope to improve on as they intensify their clampdown on shebeens and drug dealers from Monday. (from IOL)

In the same six months, the city of Cape Town's Drug Busters unit, which falls under the substance abuse task team, confiscated R416 280 in drugs and raided more than 160 suspected drug dens.

37 Fines in 6 months - at just over a R1000 each is not really trying hard enough. The number of raids on shebeens pathetic.. Here's hoping they try a bit harder.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Cape liquor wars loom

"What must we do if we can't drink? We're poor; it's our only way of having some joy. I'll march on Parliament and there'll be war if shebeens are closed. We'll die fighting for our right to drink and sell Carling and Smirnoff."
Hendriks Masizana sells liquor from his shack in Cape Town's Joe Slovo squatter camp. In these words he outlined his bitter opposition to a tough new liquor law introduced by the Western Cape government. The law pits the province against both shebeen owners and the booze industry.

In a bid to tackle the province's chronic alcohol-related ills it aims to shut down illegal outlets by regulating supply at source and placing the onus on manufacturers and distributors to supply only those with valid liquor licences.

It will also be an offence for anyone to drink alcohol in a vehicle, including passengers.

Offenders face fines of up to R1-million and/or five years' imprisonment, while the state can seize vehicles and even buildings belonging to them.

Driving the Western Cape Liquor Act is provincial finance minister Garth Strachan, who said he would not be intimidated by looming resistance to the restrictions.

"This Act is zero-tolerance stuff. We have to curb the massive and devastating effect that alcohol has on our society," Strachan said.

"Retailers have profited for decades from selling liquor under the guise of legality to illegal shebeens."

In September last year Richard Chance, SAB Miller's corporate social responsibility manager, wrote to Strachan objecting to clauses in the Act, which, he said, would make it almost impossible to obtain a licence for liquor sales in a residential area and even revoke existing licences. He warned that the provincial Act conflicts with national legislation, warning that it might be open to constitutional challenge.

The liquor industry, estimated to be worth R40-billion a year, is said to make up to 60% of its profits by selling alcohol to shebeens.

The Western Cape has 3 200 legal sellers of alcohol and about 30 000 illegal outlets, most of which would close under the new law. Partly in force since January 1, it has already resulted in some closures. Officials estimate that between 60 000 and 100 000 jobs may be at stake.

Firmly behind Strachan is the head of the Medical Research Council's alcohol and drug abuse research unit, Charles Parry, who has worked with the minister on the legislation for five years. "I'm a happy man. This is the most important and far-reaching provincial policy around alcohol in South Africa and a major step forward in addressing the over-supply of alcohol and under-regulation of the industry ... The cost and burden of alcohol on the country is too big to be left as is."

But Masizana gave another perspective, saying that because of the tough requirements he had given up trying to go legal years ago.

"The liquor board people told me to have toilets for men and women and facilities for people in wheelchairs. I laughed and said: Hey! I live in a shack. People sit on crates - where are you people from?"

He has supported his eight-member family on the proceeds of alcohol sales since inheriting the shebeen from his father and has not had other employment.

"We know that drinking and crime walk hand in hand. The ladies drink too much and then they get raped. The men drink too much and then they either commit crimes or they get robbed.

"Of course crime will come down when you close us down. But then unemployment will go up and people will commit crime in any case," Masizana said.

Black wholesalers are also objecting. Andile Martins, the manager of Langa Liquors, which has a R3,5-million a month turnover and sells 80% of its stock to illegal shebeen owners, warned that the Act "will close us down and completely change life in the townships".

The SA Liquor Traders' Association threatened this week to take government to court over the Act, while the big manufacturers, SAB Miller and Brandhouse, are preparing representations to the provincial government.

"SAB doesn't deliver to illegal shebeens and will continue to supply only licensed outlets," said Janine van Stolk, SAB's communications manager.

Strachan said his department was studying the impact of the law and would accommodate unemployed shebeen owners through a three-year initiative to create 100 000 jobs.

South Africa's serial killer:

  • Alcohol abuse costs South Africa at least R9-billion a year -- roughly R4 000 per taxpayer.
  • Adult per capita consumption of alcohol is among the highest in the world -- more than 17 litres a year.
  • Alcohol is the third-largest contributor to death and disability in South Africa -- after unsafe sex and interpersonal violence.
  • About half of all the murders committed in South Africa are related to alcohol abuse.
  • About 60% of hospital trauma cases result from drunkenness.
  • The incidence of foetal alcohol syndrome in Cape Town is one per every 281 births.
  • In 67% of domestic violence cases in the Cape the perpetrator has been drinking alcohol.
  • Men with an alcohol problem are twice as likely to commit violent acts against their partners; women who drink are twice as likely to be victims of violence.
  • Sixty percent of drivers who die in accidents have dangerously high levels of alcohol in their blood.
  • Fifty percent of truck drivers and 30% of taxi drivers drive under the influence of alchohol and/or dagga. (we can stop with this and or stuff now... it means nothing!)
  • One out of every seven drivers on the road at night is drunk.
-- Source: Medical Research Council

Source: Mail & Guardian Online

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Rocklands residents start marching

Rocklands residents marched on six alleged drug houses on Wednesday night where they demanded that dealers stop selling drugs to their children, or move out of the area. (From IOL)

It was the third consecutive day that residents, the neighbourhood watch and Community Police Forum (CPF), accompanied by the police, took their protest to the doors of alleged drug dealers.

"Parents are frustrated. Their own children are stealing their things and exchanging them for drugs. Children as young as 13 go to the drug houses in the morning. We want a clean Rocklands," said Daniels.

Marching to close down shebeens and drug dens is not a good idea. That it is sanctioned and watched over by the police is unbelievable. In the past these marches got out of hand, but the police sanction and support the marchers. If the public really knew that the houses are drug dens then they could go and report it at the police station? That is the way that the law works. Complaining that the accused gets out on bail and is back doing what he was within a day ignores the fact that if that were true all the public needs to do is re-report the person and have them re-arrested. That is the way it is supposed to work. Instead the community decide to march and the police (remember how "understaffed" they are) now have to go along to keep the peace.... rather than actually taking statements, obtaining search warrants and dealing with the problem.


Monday, January 12, 2009

Shebeen Blitz in Masiphumelele

Police arrested 11 illegal shebeen operators in Masiphumelele informal settlement near Ocean View at the weekend, sparking anger in the community. (From IOL)

The crackdown, which took place on Saturday evening, was followed by a mass protest Sunday morning at the police station as colleagues demanded the release of arrested shebeen operators.

When they were released on Sunday afternoon, the shebeen operators were met with songs, cheers and ululation by hundreds of protestors who had gathered in and outside the police station.

Mbulawa said the crackdown would continue and taken to a higher level, as illegal shebeens were major breeders of domestic violence, rape and murder, among other serious crimes.

The operators are usually warned to shut down their operations before they are arrested, said Mbulawa.

He said these operators would usually promise the police to get licensed but "they don't do so".