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    South Africa to deploy troops to tackle crime gangs

    Oki Bin OkiBy Oki Bin OkiFebruary 13, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    South Africa to deploy troops to tackle crime gangs
    South Africa to deploy troops to tackle crime gangs
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    South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said he will deploy the army to help the police fight criminal gangs and illegal mining in the country.

    Gang violence is a major problem in South Africa, which has one of the world’s highest murder rates.
    “Organised crime is now the most immediate threat to our democracy, our society and our economic development,” Ramaphosa said in his annual State of the Nation Address (Sona) on Thursday.

    “I will be deploying the South African National Defence Force to support the police,” he added.

    Last month, Police Minister Firoz Cachalia said the country’s police were not yet able to defeat the deadly criminal gangs, in a stark admission that underscored the scale of the country’s crime crisis.

    In his address to parliament, Ramaphosa said he had directed the chiefs of the police and army to draw up a plan on where “our security forces should be deployed within the next few days”.

    He singled out Western Cape and Gauteng provinces, where the military deployment would be mostly targeted in response to rising gang violence and illegal mining.

    “Children here in the Western Cape are caught in the crossfire of gang wars. People are chased out of their homes by illegal miners in Gauteng,” said Ramaphosa.

    Authorities blame illegal miners, known as “zama zamas”, typically armed, undocumented foreign nationals, for their involvement in organised crime syndicates.

    Beyond the military deployment, Ramaphosa announced additional measures to combat crime, including recruiting 5,500 police officers, strengthening intelligence, and targeting crime syndicates.
    South Africa, the continent’s most industrialised nation, has long struggled with entrenched organised crime.

    Police data shows that an average of 63 people were killed each day between April and September last year.

    By BBC News

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