As with all unsound Machiavellian plots when it does not go the way of the new world order the political élites just get more free armed security at the expense of the tax payer, or jet off to another country and leave us to survive as best as we can. They then have the temerity from their safe havens to insist that we should be disarmed. Using a turgid dialect they tell us disarming people will contribute to our safety, well being happiness and world peace.
("a turgid dialect of English" — a vague and ambiguous way of speaking, to ensure a level of confusion in the public so they do not overreact to officials' remarks.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=11521645
Opposition blames ANC for rise in violent crime amid claims of corruption and high youth unemployment. South Africa's murder rate has increased for the third year running, with opposition groups saying the figures mirror "a country at war".
The murder rate jumped 4.6 per cent with 17,805 murders committed between April 2014 and March 2015, an increase of 782 deaths from the year before. Almost 49 people were killed every day in a country of 52 million people.
Armed robberies, burglaries and car-jackings also increased. Instances of truck hijacking had the biggest leap with a 29 per cent increase on the previous year.
Police pointed to a decline in rape and assault as a positive sign but analysts said it indicated another problem: that South Africans were failing to report crime because of a loss of trust in the police.
Opposition parties laid the blame squarely at the door of the ruling African National Congress.
The murder figures, which have risen each year from a low of 15,554 in 2011/2012, reflect a reversal of what many had hoped was long-term progress in reducing violent crime.
Dianne Kohler-Barnard, shadow police minister of the main opposition Democratic Alliance, said "17,805 is a number I would expect from a country at war".
Gareth Newham, head of the governance, crime and justice division at the Institute for Security Studies, said the statistics reflected a "leadership crisis" in the police caused by endemic corruption in President Jacob Zuma's Government, where political allies are often promoted above skilled professionals.
"This is the third year in a row we've seen an increase in violent crime and that's unprecedented in democratic South Africa," he said.
Police commissioner Riah Phiyega, a civilian promoted by Zuma to lead the police three years ago, is facing an inquiry over her handling of the Marikana police shootings of 34 striking miners just months into her job.
Her predecessor Bheki Cele was sacked over a deal for a new police headquarters, and his predecessor Jackie Selebi was jailed for taking bribes from a drug lord.
"Each of these commissioners has forced out good, honest cops that might have challenged them and brought in their own people," Newham said. "We have seen very poor appointments at the highest levels of the organization, people who don't have the experience to use the considerable police resources properly, or use their power to further their own interests rather than the interests of the country."
Releasing the figures to a parliamentary committee, Phiyega said her police force had "a good story to tell" and pointed to a 10-year trend of decline in overall crime.
Nathi Nhleko, the Police Minister, said the high murder rate could not be blamed on the police alone and that every member of society could influence it by "the way we raise our children".
"To think we can resolve the issue of murder on our own is effectively just hallucination in a sense, because it's a social problem," he said.
Ingrid Molai, a youth worker in Alexandra township in Johannesburg, blamed the increase on youth unemployment, which remains at around 50 per cent, and corruption. "If even the parliamentarians are doing it, our kids ask us why not them?"
Dangerous times
- 49 people killed every day in South Africa
- 4.6% jump in the murder rate in the past year
- 3rd year in a row there has been an increase in violent crime
- Daily Telegraph UK