Soweto cops warned against taking part in looting

 

Police vowed on Friday to take strong action against a policeman who allegedly took part in the looting of foreign-owned shops in Soweto.

Gauteng police commissioner Lt-General Lesetja Mothiba warned other police officers to be careful they did not find themselves on the wrong side of the law.

“They must resist from turning into criminals themselves,” Lesetja said.

He was speaking at a press briefing held at the Moroka police station on Friday morning.

The police officer was apparently filmed participating in looting in Dobsonville earlier in the week in clashes between foreigners and locals that have killed two people — a local teenager and a foreign national.

Gauteng’s community safety MEC Sizakele Nkosi-Malobane on Thursday said the officer, who was stationed Dobsonbville, had been identified from the clip and would be formally charged.

A total of 121 people had been arrested since the looting began in Soweto on Monday.

The looting came after a foreigner allegedly shot and killed 14-year-old Mthetheleli Siphiwe Mahori who he claimed was part of a group that tried to rob his shop.

Looting had since spread to the Diepsloot, north of Johannesburg, and Kagiso on the West Rand with dozens of foreigners being taken for refuge by police.

 

POLICE FORCE JOURNO TO DELETE PHOTOS

Johannesburg – A Sapa reporter was forced by three police officers, not in uniform, to delete pictures from her cellphone she took outside a Somali-owned shop in Dobsonville, Soweto, on Thursday.

“The one officer stood over my shoulder as I deleted them one by one,” Mpho Raborife said.

“Then he told me that I am not allowed to take a photo of that scene because it was a public violence matter so that area was part of their jurisdiction.”

Raborife was driving to work when she passed three Somali-owned shops.

Three marked police vehicles were parked outside. Two men were loading items, including packs of cold drinks, into a white van.

The journalist pulled over, put on her hazard lights and ran to the area to take several photos. After she got back into her car and drove for about 700m, a police vehicle tried to flag her down.

“Then they drove next to me and one rolled down the window and told me to pull over. Then I pulled over and they asked me where the photos are that I took as I was not allowed to take pictures of a police scene,” Raborife said.

“I told them I was a journalist and they said that they had no proof of it and then I showed them my press card.

“Then they said either way I am not allowed to take pictures because I did not ask permission, and that I can’t just show up at a scene and take photos and leave.”

Another officer told Raborife they wanted to see the photos. He held on to her press card and took her cellphone. Then said they had to take her to their station commander.

She told them she was running late for work, and asked if she could use her phone to inform her bosses. They said no.

Raborife offered to delete the photographs and to call her boss, but the officers insisted she accompany them to the Dobsonville police station.

On the way there the officers stopped and told her that going to the police station would take a long time, but if she deleted the pictures they would let her go.

“I told them that it was an open place, a neutral zone and a public area and the cop insisted that I was not allowed to take pictures there and ‘leak them to the public’.”

They gave her back her phone and press card after she deleted the photographs.

An officer took down Raborife’s details while another officer took a photo of her car.

Sapa editor Mark van der Velden said the reporter identified herself with a press card and while the police were in a police van, they were in plain clothes and did not identify themselves as required.

“On the facts available so far, this amounts to grossly unprofessional and unprocedural behaviour by police officers who clearly knowingly went out of their way to intimidate a working journalist to suppress public interest information on a very topical news story on xenophobia.

“Well-known standing orders for any police dealing with media specifically prohibits forcing them to delete photos, and they know this very well,” he said.

Van der Velden said this was another incident of police officers ignoring firm standing orders from their own commanders because they get away with it.

Sapa will, also through the SA National Editors’ Forum, lodge a formal complaint with the police commissioner’s office and follow up with enquiries as to what action was taken, he said.

“What happened is unfortunate,” Gauteng police spokesperson Kay Makhubela said.

“Let her open a case so we can investigate. I don’t think it’s necessary to delete the photographs because the reporter was doing her job,” he said.

“A journalist must ask permission when they arrive at a crime scene. For now she must open a case because an allegation is an allegation. If she opens a case, it is based on the case not a rumour.”

Raborife would open a case later on Thursday.

Police commissioner Riah Phiyega’s spokesperson Solomon Makgale was not immediately available for comment.

FOREIGNERS FLEE SOWETO

More foreign national businessmen fled from the volatile Soweto, south of Johannesburg on Thursday. Johannesburg metro police escorted five trucks loaded with goods a group of Bangladeshi managed to save when their shops were looted at Ikwezi train station in Mofolo.  

“I do not know where are we going. Our boss has arranged a place somewhere,” said Mbi Rashed.

He said they had lost stock valued at thousands of rands.

“It is too much,” he said, pointing to a broken window near the door.

Inside men were removing some of the stock from a store room.

About 200 people stood on the street ululating and whistling as the five trucks passed them escorted by the metro police.

“Are they still there?” screamed a young man as the police cleared the crowd from the road for the trucks to pass.

The police put yellow tape around the shops and stood guard waiting for the trucks to return for another load.

The trucks were transporting the goods to Fouriesburg.

The violence was sparked by the death of Mthetheleli Siphiwe Mahori, 14, in Snake Park on Monday.

He was allegedly shot by a shopkeeper who fired at a group of people allegedly wanted to rob him.

After the shooting, residents went on the rampage in apparent revenge, attacking foreigners and looting their shops.

The violence spilled over to other parts of Soweto.

 

Source : Sapa

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