Constant Fear and Mob Rule in South Africa Slum

Crime in South Africa is commonly portrayed as an onslaught against the wealthy, but it is the poor who are most vulnerable: poor people conveniently accessible to poor criminals. Diepsloot, an impoverished settlement on the northern edge of Johannesburg, has an estimated population of 150,000, and the closest police station is 10 miles away.

To spend time in Diepsloot over three weeks is to observe the unrelenting fear so common among the urban poor. Experts point to the particularly brutal nature of crime in this country: the unusually high number of rapes, hijackings and armed robberies. The murder rate, while declining, is about eight times higher than in the United States.

In Diepsloot, people usually bear their losses in silence, their misfortune unreported and their offenders unknown. If a suspect is identified, victims usually inform quasi-legal vigilante groups or hire their own thugs to recover their property.

This ran on the front page of Tuesday’s New York Times. It is a sobering account of just some of the plight of the urban poor globally. Read it all–KSH.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, Africa, Law & Legal Issues, Poverty, South Africa

One comment on “Constant Fear and Mob Rule in South Africa Slum

  1. Boniface says:

    Unfortunately, it is always so. Those least affected by crime and violence are the one’s (out of fear) always talking about it. Those that have to live with it, realize how truly insidious criminal behavior is own the community. They know that the answer is not always by a gun, an adt system and lock those criminals up.