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Crime stats 'thin on analysis'

2004-10-20 22:19
line

Cape Town - Police must explain why certain crime categories have dropped if they want South Africans to believe the recently released statistics, parliament's safety and security portfolio committee heard on Wednesday.

Anton du Plessis, head of the Institute for Security Studies' crime and justice programme, told MPs decreases in murder, hijacking, and cash-in-transit robberies needed to be explained.

According to the SAPS's annual report for 2003/04, murder dropped by more than 10% nationally, and by 25% in the Western Cape over the previous year.

Hijackings were down by 48% and cash-in-transit robberies by 50%, Du Plessis said.

"We expected a decline in most categories, but we did not expect it to be so big.

"We are doing further studies to actually try and explain why that happened. I want to know why murder dropped by 25% in the Western Cape.

"I don't know if we can say, 'well, it was Operation Crackdown'. The annual report is very thin on analysis," Du Plessis said, adding that "many South African still don't believe it".

He said the analysis was the most important part of the report to explain why certain crime categories had decreased, but it had been left out.

"We think that is the very crucial part of the report because people who read it... quote directly from it. There is not enough analysis, there is not enough explanation.

Sustainability

"We are concerned about the sustainability of these decreases, especially the big ones," Du Plessis told the committee.

Most South Africans were much more fearful of crime in 2003 compared to 1998, he said. "Public perception are crucial, they are key."

Asked why many South Africans did not believe the statistics, Du Plessis said it could be a combination of the moratorium placed on the release of statistics a few years ago, or general pessimism.

"Some of it is justified, some of it not. People, generally speaking, don't trust crime statistics.

"That's why we are saying there should be more analysis in the annual report so that it's not just the crime statistics that are coming out, but there is actually an explanation of what is happening behind those decreases."

He said although he personally believed most of statistics, he would conduct further research "as to why some of the decreases were as big".

"I would like to understand them better before I can say I'm fully in agreement with them.

Population ratios

"The other reason I don't believe all decreases is because the reporting phenomena, for example in the rape issue, needs to be explained further."

Another concern he had was how the police determined their ratios and population growth.

"They say that the population has grown by 30% in the past 10 years; some estimates say it's growing only by 1.8%.

"I would want more explanation about how those population ratios and population growth curves are determined," he said.

- SAPA

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Latest comment in South Africa

Pieter says... No disrespect to blacks who would like to own a farm, but is it not obvious that by giving someone a piece of land, it does not guarantee a successful farmer. I am from a farming community, and let me tell you, our family have been farming for over a 100 years, and it is no walk in the park! Can it not be understood that farming, and succesful farming is needed in this country, so that we can feed the nation!!!! It is pointless to try and rectify the wrongs of the past by trying to re-distribute land (farms) to people who does not know how to farm(once again, no disrespect, as it is not their fault). Does it not make more sense to rather give them property in the larger cities (flats or housing units, which can also generate an income, but does not necessarily needs a lot of skills)! Oufr municipalities own lots of land, which does not get used to it's full potential, now they rahter want to take someting from poeple who was put their lives work into it, and built it up over generations to be productive, just to be ruined. Buildings and other structures are also land, but will at least not affect the feeding of the nation. Farming does not always equel wealth, it takes hard work, lots of skills and dedication, which you don't get overnight!!! Read the article...

 
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