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Restoring trust and safety in the Western Cape
The Star
|October 31, 2025
WHEN Acting Police Minister Firoz Cachalia outlined his new plan to tackle gangsterism and extortion in the Western Cape in Parliament, he spoke to a truth every resident of the province already knows: the problem is not just crime; it is fear.
Fear has silenced witnesses, hollowed out trust, and turned many communities into no-go zones after dark.
Reversing that pattern will take more than enforcement; it will take visibility. Police need to see what is actually happening, in real time, and respond with intelligence and compassion.
Nowhere is this more evident than in the Cape Flats. Every week, families in Hanover Park, Manenberg, Nyanga, Mitchells Plain and Delft endure the sounds of almost constant gunfire. Yet much of that violence never enters official statistics and is “invisible” to authorities. Police reports depend on 10111 calls, but people living under gang control often stay silent. The result is a dangerous paradox: the places that need the most protection often appear, on paper, to be quieter than the lived reality.
That invisibility has policy consequences. Without reliable data, scarce resources are misplaced, progress cannot be measured, and communities lose faith that their government even knows what they are living through. Minister Cachalia’s promise of “intelligence-driven policing” is therefore more than bureaucratic language, it is the difference between guessing and knowing, between reaction and prevention.
Over the past few years, the City of Cape Town has introduced new technologies that can pierce that fog. Among them is ShotSpotter, an acoustic gunshot detection network that pinpoints the precise location of gunfire the moment it occurs.
The system does not record conversations or monitor people; it listens only for gunshots, triangulates their origin, and alerts police within seconds. Each alert is a data point - evidence of where and when violence is happening, even when no one calls it in.
This story is from the October 31, 2025 edition of The Star.
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