A top police officer has blamed the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa) for the lack of safety on Cape Town’s trains.
Briefing Parliament’s standing committee on community safety on Wednesday, SAPS representative Brigadier Bonginkosi Solucutho said one of the police’s challenges was that CCTV cameras on stations were not seen as a priority by Prasa.
“Cameras are off since 2015. On platforms there are no cameras,” he said.
Other challenges that hindered police work included a lack of fencing and little or no access control to stations; no communication from Prasa to commuters about train cancellations and delays; and overcrowding on the trains as a result of shorter train sets.
“Power failures, weather conditions and commuters’ behaviour make policing difficult.”
He listed other problems:
To emphasise the challenges of policing on trains during peak hours Solucutho played a video clip of an overcrowded train coming on the Central line into Bonteheuwel on the way to Cape Town. In the clip many people were “surfing” on the train and some standing in the door while the train was in motion.
Cable theft on the railways had risen sharply in 2017/18, SAPS figures presented to Parliament showed. In the 2015/16 year there were 941 incidents of general theft, rising to 972 in 2016/17 and decreasing slightly to 815 in 2017/18. Incidents of cable theft rose from 292 to 478 and then to 711 in the 2017/18 financial year.
Republished from GroundUp
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