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How to make your suburb a no-go zone for criminals

Security company calls on South Africans to become involved with their local community safety groups.

Your neighbours are often the first people to see if something is wrong at your home, which makes them the ideal partners in the fight against crime.

This week, Fidelity ADT Security issued a public call on South Africans to become involved with their local community safety groups, as these voluntary organisations have time-and-again been proven to make a positive difference.

“If we stand together with our next-door neighbours and look after each other, we can make our suburbs ‘no-go zones’ for criminals,” said Stuart Clarkson, Managing Executive for Fidelity ADT.

If you have just moved into a new suburb, he recommends making the effort to meet the people who live next door as soon as possible and share contact details with them. They could also provide useful advice on existing community safety organisations in the area. In other instances, your local security company can also put you in touch with members of your community safety organisation.

Not all communities have the energy or appetite to set up a formal neighbourhood watch, but this does not mean that there is nothing residents can do in terms of organising themselves.

“If you don’t have a community watch, we suggest setting up regular meetings with the local police to workshop ideas on how you could assist them in keeping the area safe. It could be as simple as just sharing tips and advice and having a reliable list of contact details for each other. The point is – we all have a part to play and we simply can no longer be idle bystanders when it comes to our own safety,” said Clarkson.

He strongly urges anyone who lives in an area where a neighbourhood or community watch has already been set up to become involved with the organisation as a matter of urgency. The involvement could take many forms – from becoming a patroller to offering monetary or logistical administrative support.

Knowing who lives in your area and engaging with your community often leads to combined security implementation and this has a far greater impact on an area than individual efforts, he explained. When neighbours start sharing security tips and reporting suspicious individuals or vehicles spotted in their area, security providers and the police are able to get a better understanding of the activity in the area and implement effective crime prevention tactics.

Clarkson said it is also very important to introduce your children to your neighbours. You can for instance agree to keep an eye on each other’s children when they are playing in the garden. Teach your children to go over to one of your neighbours if they are home alone and feel unsafe.

Another good idea is to write the contact details of at least one or two of your neighbours on your list of emergency services numbers and keep this near your telephone. In the event that something happens to you or a loved one in your home, a neighbour will be able to assist you until emergency services arrive.

“The men and women of the police simply cannot be everywhere all the time. Neighbours that care about each other and become active participants in the safety of their suburb can make a massive difference,” said Clarkson.

Do you perhaps have more information pertaining to this story? Email us at randfonteinherald@caxton.co.za  (please remember to include your contact details in the email) or phone us on 011 693 3671.

For free daily local news on the West Rand, also visit our sister newspaper websites

Roodepoort Record

Krugersdorp News 

Get It Joburg West Magazine

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