Police Budget Vote disregards rural safety
Farming communities were disappointed when the Budget Vote of the Minister of Police, Bheki Cele, disregarded the Rural Safety Strategy.
Minister of Police, Bheki Cele, delivered his Budget Vote on Tuesday, 23 May 2023. Rural communities, including farmers and farm workers, waited to hear whether it would address the crucial issue of rural safety. These communities, which battle the same challenges as every other sector of the economy (inflation, loadshedding, deteriorating infrastructure), simply cannot shoulder the additional burden of poor policing and the absence of communication on the way forward for safety in rural communities as well. Sadly, Minister Cele failed to use the opportunity of his budget vote to address this critical challenge of crime in the farming communities that impacts food security in South Africa.
This was the first budget vote since the successful hosting of the Rural Safety Summit held on 27 and 28 June 2022, and one would have hoped to hear the Rural Safety Strategy discussed in some detail. Instead, Minister Cele failed to mention rural safety, farming communities, or crime. This failure follows a disturbing trend, which increasingly corrodes the agricultural sector’s confidence in his Department’s commitment to the Rural Safety Strategy.
For example, it is commendable that the Minister announced a greater focus on crime prevention, but this should go hand in hand with an emphasis on visible policing. That the Minister understands this is reflected in adopting a plan to ensure that streets and highways throughout this country are saturated weekly with high-density operations. Yet the Minister failed to explain how this would be achieved in rural farming communities. The fact is that the most effective way to implement visible policing in rural communities is through a well-resourced reservist programme, but no resources were allocated for it in the budget.
The Rural Safety Strategy was also omitted when the Minister spoke on releasing the Quarter 3 crime statistics in February 2023. On that occasion, too, he failed to address the peculiar challenges facing our rural farming communities. Yet it was clear from those statistics how bleak the safety picture in South Africa is. Even as he touted his department’s “progress”, the Minister was forced to concede that the crime figures did not “paint an overall positive picture of the crime situation in our country” – a remarkable understatement given that contact crimes increased by more than 11% and property-related crimes by just over 7%.
Speaking of violent crime, the Minister called for “a broader conversation … about what is at the heart of violent crime in the country.” This is not a new call; though it remains important, the country has no more time left for conversation. Now it’s time to act. This is what we’d hoped to hear in the Budget Vote: what action the police are taking on rural safety and implementing the outcomes of the Summit.
Minister Cele has also, in the past, called on “communities to take charge and be allies in safety”. No community has been more proactive than the agricultural sector in seeking engagement and collaboration with the police. In fact, the Rural Safety Strategy was born out of this community’s call for collaboration and dialogue. But it is difficult to ask farming communities to continue engaging with the government when engagement has borne little fruit. The government has been slow to follow through on its commitments, and farmers, farm workers and rural communities broadly continue to face daily threats to their lives, property and their operations.
Agri SA believes that a few key aspects of the strategy must be agreed on as the starting point in implementing it more effectively. In addition to the reservist system. these include more effective criminal investigations, an emphasis on suspect detention paired with the opposition of bail by the police, effective crime intelligence and crime analysis, and the creation of police task teams and rapid response units in hotspot areas. Until these measures are implemented, it is unconscionable to expect more from rural communities when the government has not come to the party.
Agri SA has continuously driven the Rural Safety Strategy and issued call after call for Minister Cele to fast-track the more effective implementation thereof. Farming communities cannot be called upon to contribute more to the successful strategy implementation while the government keeps us in the dark about its contribution to effectively implementing this joint plan.
Agri SA has always had a constructive relationship with the South African Police Service, especially in relation to matters of safety and security. The organisation was involved in implementing the Rural Safety Plan in 1997 and, more recently, the National Rural Safety Strategy in July 2011. This makes the Minister’s failure to respond to Agri SA’s numerous enquiries on the progress of the Ministerial Task Team even more disappointing.
As things stand, there appears to have been a deterioration in the political will to address rural safety, but there is too much at stake to abandon the strategy. Beyond the ever-increasing private investment into security measures by the farming community, we can only hope that Minister Cele will soon finally show a long-awaited sense of urgency in announcing the outcome of the Summit, which is what is required to keep South Africa’s food-producing communities safe.
– By Kobus Visser