Dear Fellow South African,
Since we declared the nation-wide lockdown, we have found that the majority of South Africans have responded with patience and understanding despite the considerable hardship. There is a common appreciation that the measures that have been enforced since Friday 27 March are in the best interests of all. While the majority of South Africans continue to respect the rules of the lockdown and the rights of others, there are some among us seeking to exploit this crisis for their own sinister ends.
It is a great indictment of our society that dozens of schools have been burgled, trashed or burnt to the ground. When the lockdown is lifted and learning resumes, thousands of our children will have no school to return to, depriving them of the right to education. Eskom has also reported an increase in cable theft and vandalism of its infrastructure since the lockdown began, resulting in power supply interruptions and damage that will cost a considerable amount to repair.
That public property is being vandalised while the entire country is experiencing hardship because of the lockdown, is a demonstration of utter disrespect and disregard for the majority of South Africans who are law-abiding. It is despicable that criminals are using this period of the lockdown as a cover to break the law at a time when our law-enforcement authorities are occupied with supporting the national effort to contain the pandemic. Unfortunately, criminals are also preying on the weak and vulnerable.
Our hearts go out to the family of Mama Ngenzeni Zuma who was raped and killed in KwaZulu-Natal last month by men who allegedly pretended to be soldiers to gain entry into her home. We feel the pain of the family of 14-year-old Simphiwe Sibeko who went missing from her Soweto home, and whose body was found dumped in bushes last week. As a nation, we are saddened at the death of Constable Percy Ramalepe who was shot and killed while attending to a domestic violence call in Johannesburg last week.
It is disturbing that during a time of such immense difficulty for our country, women and girls are being terrorised inside their own homes, forcing them to make desperate calls for help. The number of calls to the GBV National Command Centre has increased since the lockdown began on 27 March. Since the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, violence against women has become a global problem.
Last week the United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said in a video message that since restrictions were imposed by countries around the world to contain the coronavirus, women and girls were increasingly facing violence “where they should be safest: in their own homes”. While reaffirming that lockdowns and quarantines were essential, Secretary-General Guterres said they were trapping women with abusive partners, resulting in “a horrifying global surge in domestic violence”.
“In some countries, the number of women calling support services has doubled,” the UN Secretary-General said.
As South Africa we have heeded the call for governments to prioritise gender-based violence in their national responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. We continue to implement the Emergency Response Plan to end gender-based violence that was announced last year. Support services to vulnerable women and children remain operational throughout the lockdown, including psycho-social services like counselling for women and children, sheltering and places of safety, and medico-legal services in cases of sexual violence. The Gender-Based Violence National Command Centre remains operational. I have directed the Minister of Police to ensure that Family Violence, Child Protection and Sexual Offences Units are reinforced at police stations during the lockdown and beyond.
We recognise since people may not leave their homes, women and children in abusive situations are vulnerable. Survivors of violence may not have access to phones or airtime, or public transport to take them to a police station, shelter or a doctor. To this effect the Interim Steering Committee on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide, in consultation with civil society organisations is developing guidelines and protocols for GBV management in the context of COVID-19. Our law-enforcement officials are to be commended for swiftly arresting suspects in the recent murders of the two women. They should also be commended for arresting and charging 148 suspects for crimes of gender-based violence since the start of the lockdown.
We are aware that the restrictions that have been placed on people’s movement and the confinement to their homes is a frustration for many. But there is no excuse, nor will there ever be any excuse, for violence – against women, children, the elderly, members of the LGBTQI+ community, foreign nationals, not against anyone.
Vandalism of public property and key economic infrastructure will not be tolerated. We call upon communities to play their part in reporting such acts, because they seldom take place in the absence of witnesses. When communities allow themselves to be passive bystanders when they witness crime, they become party to the sabotage that ultimately disadvantages ourselves, our children and our communities. I have a message for those callous criminals who think they can take advantage. The criminal justice system is not on leave. Our law enforcement authorities will deal with those who transgress the law. You will be arrested, you will be tried and you will be put behind bars.
As the UN Secretary-General said in his message, women’s rights and freedoms are essential to strong, resilient societies. Violence against women erodes the moral fibre of our society. It sinks its insidious roots in families and communities, causing the cycle to be repeated across generations. Our resolve and commitment to rid our country of this scourge remains firm. We will continue to bring all the state’s resources to bear to support vulnerable women and children, and ensure that perpetrators face the full might of the law.
I call on the men of South Africa and all citizens to play their part to combat gender-based violence and to provide survivors with the necessary support and assistance. This time of difficulty does not diminish the responsibility of every citizen to respect the rights and dignity of others. Some have called for a gender-based violence ‘ceasefire’ during the time of pandemic. This is not enough. We want to see it end, once and for all.
With best wishes,
A South African disaster for so many - gender based violence and business as usual
- MajGenl.Meade
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A South African disaster for so many - gender based violence and business as usual
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts
Re: A South African disaster for so many - gender based violence and business as usual
Sounds to me like this is an excellent example of what "shoot on sight" policies are for...That public property is being vandalised while the entire country is experiencing hardship because of the lockdown, is a demonstration of utter disrespect and disregard for the majority of South Africans who are law-abiding. It is despicable that criminals are using this period of the lockdown as a cover to break the law at a time when our law-enforcement authorities are occupied with supporting the national effort to contain the pandemic. Unfortunately, criminals are also preying on the weak and vulnerable.



Re: A South African disaster for so many - gender based violence and business as usual
Why burn schools?
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
- MajGenl.Meade
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Re: A South African disaster for so many - gender based violence and business as usual
Ask Alice
School's out for summer
School's out forever
My school's been blown to pieces
School's out for summer
School's out forever
My school's been blown to pieces
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts
Re: A South African disaster for so many - gender based violence and business as usual
South Africa has been a mess for some time. The ANC is corrupt. It's keeping the masses entertained by the thoughts of redistributing farmland. IOW it's headed down the same road as Zimbabwe who now wants farmers back. Pillaging in SA is a way of life. Trucks are attacked and the cargoes stolen.
Thank you RBG wherever you are!
- MajGenl.Meade
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Re: A South African disaster for so many - gender based violence and business as usual
Thanks, Darren. I live here and know some of the things of which you write. Part of the ANC is corrupt; the part that often sways the conference votes and subsequent policies. Our very own Ace Magashule, former gaulieter of Boemfontein and premier of the Free State, is at the center of that very web of corruption.
One of the policies aimed at keeping the trough deep and wide is the policy of land redistribution without compensation, which will require a Constitutional (or as so many call it, Consooshnal) amendment. In the meantime, many farmers are moving into joint land ventures with their workers in the hope that they will not be dumped in some other place with no house, no equipment and no ability to function above subsistence farming. Needless to say, the majority of people do not want land to farm; they want to build a house and watch TV, just like me.
In spite of this, there seems to be no groundswell for being like Zimbabwe. The government itself owns 14% of all land and resists suggestions that it begin with redistributing that. So, problems will arise, one can foresee.
I would not declare so knowledgeably that "pillage is a way of life" until you've lived among the people who live the "way of life" here. True, the attacks on trucks (which stopped quite a while ago) were aimed at immigrant drivers, perceived to be stealing SA natives jobs. Looting of the trucks was incidental - burning the entire thing was the idea. True that organized gangs commit "cash in transit" robberies, often equipped with dynamite stolen from the mines. True that shoppers in some big city malls (and we always mean Joburg, Durban, Pretoria and Capetown by "big") have been robbed and shot dead for Rolex watches - not a good idea to flash the bling. But these are a minority of people - criminals.
All of the problems stem from poverty, unemployment and sub-standard housing, sanitation and municipal services. Far more insidious is the government plan for a national health insurance scheme which seems to be based on two premises: (1) the government hospitals can't provide aspirin, let alone life-saving service so close all the private hospitals and (2) look at all that loot!
Perhaps you are right.
One of the policies aimed at keeping the trough deep and wide is the policy of land redistribution without compensation, which will require a Constitutional (or as so many call it, Consooshnal) amendment. In the meantime, many farmers are moving into joint land ventures with their workers in the hope that they will not be dumped in some other place with no house, no equipment and no ability to function above subsistence farming. Needless to say, the majority of people do not want land to farm; they want to build a house and watch TV, just like me.
In spite of this, there seems to be no groundswell for being like Zimbabwe. The government itself owns 14% of all land and resists suggestions that it begin with redistributing that. So, problems will arise, one can foresee.
I would not declare so knowledgeably that "pillage is a way of life" until you've lived among the people who live the "way of life" here. True, the attacks on trucks (which stopped quite a while ago) were aimed at immigrant drivers, perceived to be stealing SA natives jobs. Looting of the trucks was incidental - burning the entire thing was the idea. True that organized gangs commit "cash in transit" robberies, often equipped with dynamite stolen from the mines. True that shoppers in some big city malls (and we always mean Joburg, Durban, Pretoria and Capetown by "big") have been robbed and shot dead for Rolex watches - not a good idea to flash the bling. But these are a minority of people - criminals.
All of the problems stem from poverty, unemployment and sub-standard housing, sanitation and municipal services. Far more insidious is the government plan for a national health insurance scheme which seems to be based on two premises: (1) the government hospitals can't provide aspirin, let alone life-saving service so close all the private hospitals and (2) look at all that loot!
Perhaps you are right.
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts
Re: A South African disaster for so many - gender based violence and business as usual
Doc's late husband was a member of the ANC and used to be a friend of Mandela. They lived in Port Edward before they left SA in 1999.
Thank you RBG wherever you are!