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SOUTH AFRICA: 12 Year Old Pupil Narrates The Terror Living In "Gang-Plagued" Manenberg, South Africa

This past weekend in gang-plagued Manenberg, a number of shootings took place once again in what community members refer to as one of those "worse weekends".


Driving through the area on Monday morning, the neighbourhood appeared quiet with a few people walking to the local spaza shops. One would never know that just a few hours before, bullets were flying.

GroundUp met with prominent community leader, Roegshanda Pascoe. She says Friday and Saturday ended with two dead and three injured.

At Downeville Primary School, not far from Kathleen Heights where most of the gang shootings take place, GroundUp spoke to two grade seven school kids about the constant violence in Manenberg.

One of the pupils, a 12-year-old, told us about her experience two weeks ago when her grandfather was shot right in front of her.

"My grandfather and I were on our way to my grandmother who was at a private clinic with my sick brother. As we were walking, they shot him through both legs. We were caught in crossfire.

"He fell to the ground. I ran away to get help and I came across my grandfather's friend, who immediately came to help him.

"If I hadn't gotten help, the gangsters would've come to finish him off, because that's what they do; they don't want to be identified. It happened on a Saturday at around 1pm. I was very lucky.

"My grandfather is in hospital now. It's very tough around here, sometimes we can't even go to school because when we walk to and from school, they are not scared to start shooting right in front of us. I've seen them many times shooting at each other," she said.

The pupil says she has also seen the gangsters shooting at police on patrol in the area.

Another Grade 7 pupil said she lost an uncle in January.

"We didn't know that he was a gangster because when he was with us he was a different person; he was our uncle. He never did any gang related things in the house. He was shot. He was 28 years old.

"I don't leave the house because I'm scared I'll be shot. They shoot anytime of the day here. I only leave the house when coming to school and go back home from school. I stay indoors and do my schoolwork. Sometimes I study under the bed or in the toilet just to be safe and to not hear the gunshots," she said.

"The police or the army should come in and collect all the gangsters in their houses and keep them in jail ... It doesn't mean that just because their lives are messed up they should mess up our lives. We have a future," said the pupil.

Last month, police, metro police and the South African National Defence Force conducted a raid in Manenberg and according to police spokesperson Noloyiso Rwexana, the joint crime prevention operation (Operation Fiela Reclaim) focused on drugs, illegal firearms and other criminal activities.

"The lock-down operation yielded significant results as 20 suspects were arrested. Eight suspects were arrested for drug related cases; two for possession of dagga and mandrax tablets; and five for possession of illegal firearms. Three firearms, 50 mandrax tablets, 35 tik packets, 18 "stoppe" dagga were confiscated during the operation. The search and seizure operation was followed by patrols on the streets in Manenberg and along local schools in the area," said Rwexana.

But Pascoe says the operation didn't help because the gangs were aware of the operation and were prepared for it. She said a day after the operation happened, the violence started again.

On Saturday, 13 June, the Manenberg Safety Forum of which Pascoe is a member will be marching against gangsterism to Parliament to handover a memorandum.
South Africa 1741363843611951994

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