Cape Town is facing another deadly surge in gang violence, with new figures exposing the scale and intensity of the crisis unfolding across the Cape Flats. In the space of just one week, dozens of lives have been lost, communities shaken, and renewed pressure placed on law enforcement to deliver meaningful results.
Gang-related violence across Cape Town has escalated sharply, with 36 people killed and 47 attempted murder cases recorded between 30 March and 5 April. The figures highlight a worsening security situation in several hotspot areas, where residents continue to live under the constant threat of gang activity and retaliatory attacks.
The statistics were brought into focus by police portfolio committee chairperson Ian Cameron, who described the impact as both immediate and deeply personal for affected communities. “It means more families getting phone calls no family should ever have to get. It means more children growing up with gunfire as part of everyday life,” he said.
One of the most alarming incidents during this period took place in Mitchells Plain, where a shooting at the Hazeldene taxi rank left 2 men dead and 5 people injured. Among the wounded were 3 children, including a 6-year-old girl and two boys aged 12 and 13. All were caught in the crossfire and transported to hospital for treatment.
Cameron, who visited the area shortly after the incident, highlighted the long-term trauma such violence inflicts on young residents. “These children should have been enjoying a carefree school holiday. Instead, they are lying in hospital because gang violence continues to tear through these communities,” he said.
Police spokesperson Andre Traut confirmed that unknown suspects opened fire on a group of people before fleeing the scene. At this stage, no arrests have been made and the motive remains under investigation.
In a separate incident in Portlands, a 26-year-old man was shot and killed in what police believe to be a gang-related attack. The Anti-Gang Unit has taken over both investigations as part of a broader response to the surge in violence.
Despite increased deployments, concerns are mounting over the effectiveness of current interventions. Cameron stressed that a shift in strategy is urgently needed. “It has to be intelligence led and prosecution led. It is not enough to put more boots on the ground and hope for the best. Operations must target the right people, the right places, and the networks behind the violence,” he said.
He further warned that limited arrests and the lack of significant drug and weapons seizures suggest that the underlying criminal networks remain largely unaffected. “If the people driving the violence are still operating, and the weapons and drugs are still flowing, then the operation is not yet landing where it needs to,” he added.
The continued instability is placing immense strain on communities across the Cape Flats, where residents are calling for sustained and coordinated action. Beyond immediate policing, there are growing discussions around strengthening collaboration between SAPS, crime intelligence, forensic units and the National Prosecuting Authority to ensure that arrests translate into successful prosecutions.
As the death toll rises, the broader question remains whether current efforts are sufficient to curb the cycle of violence, or whether more decisive structural interventions are now required to restore safety across Cape Town’s most affected areas.
Source: IOL – Tracy-Lynn Ruiters