Table View: Calls for stronger night patrols and greater police visibility are growing across Table View and Parklands after violent house robberies, assaults and a murder heightened fears about safety in the rapidly expanding communities.
Capetonians living in Table View, Parklands and surrounding suburbs are pressing for more visible policing after a series of violent home invasions placed renewed attention on police shortages, night patrols and the limits of municipal enforcement. The concerns have grown beyond ordinary housebreaking, with community representatives saying some intruders have entered occupied homes, restrained victims and stolen firearms, vehicles, electronics and other valuables.
In one reported incident in Thetford Street during February, a homeowner awoke to find three masked intruders inside his property. The robbers allegedly tied up the homeowner and his son before emptying two safes and fleeing with clothes, bank cards, a firearm, cellular telephones, electronic equipment and a Mercedes-Benz.
In a separate incident during November last year, a 75-year-old man was found dead inside his home in Sceptre Crescent, Flaming Vlei. An armed-response officer reportedly discovered the man with his hands and feet bound while the house had been left in disarray.
The incidents have strengthened demands for greater night-time police activity, more municipal officers and a sustained response to house robbery patterns across the area.
Focused Operation Targets House Break-Ins
Table View police, Community Policing Forum members and private security personnel conducted a focused operation in Sunridge and Westriding on the 10th of June. Western Cape police spokesperson Frederick van Wyk said the operation aimed to prevent house break-ins in the two areas and that Table View SAPS worked with private security and CPF members during the deployment.
The operation resulted in the arrest of 18 undocumented foreign nationals. Police had not confirmed what charges the 18 people would face at the time of publication, while Van Wyk said no burglaries had been reported in the targeted area following the operation.
The arrests should not, however, be presented as proof that those detained were responsible for the house robberies unless police formally establish such a link. Cape Town News has not seen any official statement connecting the arrested individuals to the violent home invasions.
CPF Says Criminals Study Vulnerable Properties
The Table View Community Policing Forum said house break-ins had increased and that criminal groups appeared to target properties with easier access and weaker security. The CPF said incidents had taken place at different times of the day, with some homes targeted while occupants were away at work and other incidents occurring late at night or during the early morning.
The forum said the 10th of June operation followed crime-pattern analysis identifying Sunridge and Westriding as areas requiring focused attention. CPF members, SAPS and private security partners also conduct weekly operations in identified hotspots.
Those deployments are guided by recent crime patterns so that officers and community safety groups can concentrate visibility where it is most needed. This approach reflects the increasingly important role played by neighbourhood watches, community policing structures and private security companies in areas where SAPS resources remain stretched.
Community Activist Calls for More Night Patrols
Community activist Philippe Roche said house burglaries had become more violent in recent months. He argued that Table View, Blouberg, Sunridge, Big Bay and Eden on the Bay needed stronger visible policing and more municipal patrols.
Roche said some homeowners were spending large amounts of money on armed-response services and licence-plate recognition cameras because they no longer believed existing public policing resources were sufficient. He said the central concern was the shortage of SAPS patrols, Metro Police visibility and night-time enforcement.
According to Roche, the growing pressure has also encouraged Capetonians in Table View to explore the establishment of a City Improvement District. A properly established improvement district can fund additional services, including public-safety patrols, cleaning and urban management, through an additional property levy.
It does not replace SAPS, but it can add supplementary safety resources within a defined area.

Parklands Patrol Brings Officials Face to Face With Concerns
The calls from Table View followed a separate safety oversight visit and community patrol in Parklands. Ward 107 councillor Jonathan Mills and the City’s Mayoral Committee Member for Safety and Security, JP Smith, met Capetonians, neighbourhood watch members, Community Policing Forum representatives and private security providers.
The engagement was followed by a joint visibility patrol along Parklands Main Road. Mills said motorists received fines for traffic and by-law violations during the operation, while two foreign nationals were also arrested near Park West.
Capetonians raised concerns about muggings, drug dealing, petty crime, informal trading, vagrancy and activity in areas regarded as crime hotspots. The visit gave community members a direct opportunity to discuss their safety concerns with Smith and municipal officers.
It also introduced the Ward 107 Metro Police Neighbourhood Safety Officer team to existing local safety structures.
Table View Police Station Faces Staff Vacancies
Mills said Table View police station was operating with more than 40 staff vacancies. Those vacancies place further pressure on a station responsible for a large and rapidly growing policing area.
Table View SAPS serves communities including Parklands, Blouberg, Flaming Vlei, Sunridge, West Beach, Big Bay and surrounding suburbs. Population growth, new housing developments and commercial expansion have increased the demand for patrols, crime reporting, investigations and emergency responses.
Five new Metro Police neighbourhood safety officers have been deployed in Ward 107. Mills welcomed their arrival but said more resources would be required in the longer term.
He said the City hoped to increase the number of neighbourhood safety officers and further integrate municipal law enforcement and traffic functions into a single Metro Police service. Municipal officers can enforce by-laws, traffic legislation and certain criminal laws, but SAPS remains primarily responsible for investigating serious crimes such as murder, robbery, assault and housebreaking.
Why LEAP Officers Are Not Deployed Across Table View
Some community members have questioned why Law Enforcement Advancement Plan officers are not regularly visible across Table View, Blouberg and Parklands. Smith said LEAP officers were created for deployment in Cape Town’s most serious violent-crime and gang hotspots and that their placement was guided by SAPS crime statistics.

LEAP officers were therefore concentrated in Delft, Khayelitsha, Philippi East, Nyanga, Mitchells Plain and Gugulethu. These precincts record some of Cape Town’s highest levels of murder, attempted murder and other serious violent crime.
Smith said this deployment model had been consistently communicated since the programme began. The explanation means that Table View’s calls for LEAP deployment are unlikely to be met unless the area’s official crime profile changes substantially or the programme’s mandate is expanded.
The City does, however, operate closed-circuit television networks across several parts of the metropole. Smith said Brooklyn, Table View and Milnerton were already connected to the network.
Calls to Reopen Parklands Police Station Continue
The latest patrol and robbery concerns follow an earlier community campaign to reopen the Parklands satellite police station. The campaign gained momentum after a man was shot and wounded in Morningford Road during April.
Police opened an attempted murder investigation after the man was reportedly shot while intervening in an altercation. A petition calling for the satellite station to reopen had collected 2,757 signatures by the 22nd of April.
The campaign argued that Parklands had grown rapidly without a matching increase in SAPS resources. Supporters said the closure of the satellite station weakened police visibility, increased travel distances and made it more difficult for members of the public to report crime.
Ward councillor Sue van der Linde previously said Capetonians were deeply concerned about the lack of visible policing. Table View CPF chairperson David Harris said the central problem remained the availability of officers.
He explained that the satellite station infrastructure still existed, but reopening it without enough staff could place further pressure on policing services. The facility was also limited by its location and the absence of holding cells.
Parklands Neighbourhood Watch chairperson Gary Le Roux said the broader Blouberg area depended on one police station in Table View. He said the policing area was divided into sectors that could each have only one available police vehicle.
According to Le Roux, waiting several hours for a police van was not unusual.
A Satellite Office Would Not Solve Every Problem
Reopening the Parklands satellite station could give Capetonians a more accessible point for reporting crime and seeking police assistance. However, community safety leaders have warned that a building alone would not solve the staffing problem.
A satellite office requires trained officers, vehicles, communications systems, administrative support and operational supervision. Taking officers from Table View police station to staff a satellite office could weaken the main station unless SAPS provides additional personnel.
The longer-term demand is therefore for a properly resourced police facility that reflects the population and geographic size of the area. The debate also raises questions about how national SAPS staffing decisions respond to fast-growing urban communities.
Public and Private Safety Systems Increasingly Interlinked
The Table View operations show how public policing now works alongside private security and community organisations. SAPS retains responsibility for criminal investigations and arrests, while Metro Police and City law enforcement support visible policing, by-law enforcement and road safety.
Neighbourhood watches provide local observation and report suspicious activity. Private security companies respond to alarms, patrol contracted areas and share information within community safety networks, while Community Policing Forums create a formal link between SAPS and the public.
These structures can improve visibility and information sharing, but they cannot fully compensate for police staff shortages. The growing reliance on privately funded cameras and armed response may also deepen inequality between households that can afford additional protection and those that cannot.
Homeowners Urged to Reduce Opportunities for Intruders
The CPF’s warning that criminals seek properties with easier access places attention on physical security and household routines. Capetonians should inspect gates, perimeter walls, doors, windows, garage entrances and external lighting.
Trees, bins and other objects should not provide easy access over walls or onto balconies. Alarm systems should be tested regularly, while panic buttons should remain accessible.
Vehicles should not be left running in driveways or outside gates. Household members should avoid opening gates until they have checked the street and confirmed that it is safe.
Suspicious activity should be reported quickly to SAPS, neighbourhood watches or local security providers. Security precautions cannot prevent every robbery, but they can reduce obvious opportunities and improve response times.
Police Visibility Remains Central Demand
The two recent safety operations show that law enforcement agencies and community organisations are responding to concerns in Table View and Parklands. But the public demand goes beyond occasional operations.
Capetonians are asking for sustained night patrols, faster responses, more detectives, additional vehicles and stronger visible policing. The reported staff vacancies at Table View police station remain central to those demands.
Without additional personnel, SAPS may struggle to maintain routine patrols while also responding to emergencies, processing cases and conducting investigations. The City’s five neighbourhood safety officers add a new local resource, but their mandate does not replace the work of a fully staffed police station.
The challenge is therefore not only to conduct more operations. It is to build a policing system capable of responding consistently across one of Cape Town’s fastest-growing urban regions.
Official and Emergency Contacts
Table View SAPS can be contacted through the police station for case reporting and local policing assistance. In an emergency, Capetonians should contact SAPS on 10111.
The City of Cape Town’s Public Emergency Communication Centre can be reached on 021 480 7700 from a cellular telephone or 107 from a landline. Anonymous crime information can be provided to Crime Stop on 08600 10111.
Information may also be submitted through the MySAPS mobile application. Capetonians should record the reference number issued when reporting an incident.
Official Links To Add Within The Article
South African Police Service station directory
SAPS Crime Stop information
City of Cape Town Safety and Security Directorate
City emergency contact information
Western Cape Community Policing Forum information
City Improvement District guidance
MySAPS mobile application information
Q&A
Why are Table View communities demanding more police patrols?
Community groups say house break-ins have increased and that some home invasions have become violent. They are asking for more night operations and stronger visible policing.
What happened during the 10th of June operation?
Table View SAPS, private security personnel and CPF members conducted an operation in Sunridge and Westriding. Police said 18 undocumented foreign nationals were arrested.
Were those arrested linked to the house robberies?
Police had not publicly linked the arrested individuals to the reported home invasions at the time of publication.
What concerns were raised during the Parklands patrol?
Capetonians raised concerns about muggings, drug dealing, petty crime, informal trading, vagrancy and activity in identified crime hotspots.
How many vacancies are there at Table View police station?
Ward councillor Jonathan Mills said the station was operating with more than 40 staff vacancies.
Have additional municipal officers been deployed?
Yes. Five Metro Police Neighbourhood Safety Officers have been deployed in Ward 107.
Why are LEAP officers not based in Table View?
The City says LEAP officers are assigned to the policing precincts recording the highest levels of murder, attempted murder and serious gang violence.
Is there a campaign to reopen the Parklands satellite police station?
Yes. Community members and public representatives have called for it to reopen, but safety leaders say it would require additional SAPS personnel and resources.
Who investigates house robberies?
SAPS is responsible for investigating house robbery, burglary, assault, murder and related crimes.
What number should be called during an emergency?
SAPS can be reached on 10111. Cape Town’s municipal emergency centre can be contacted on 021 480 7700 from a cellular telephone or 107 from a landline.
SAI Search Summary
Table View and Parklands communities are calling for stronger night patrols after violent house robberies, shootings and other safety concerns. Table View SAPS, the Community Policing Forum and private security conducted a focused operation in Sunridge and Westriding on the 10th of June, resulting in 18 arrests. A separate Parklands patrol allowed Capetonians to raise concerns about muggings, drugs and petty crime. Ward councillor Jonathan Mills said Table View police station had more than 40 staff vacancies, while five new Metro Police neighbourhood safety officers had been deployed in Ward 107.
Source: Cape Argus / IOL – Genevieve Serra; Tabletalk – Tara Isaacs; South African Police Service spokesperson Frederick van Wyk; Table View Community Policing Forum; Ward 107 councillor Jonathan Mills; City of Cape Town Mayoral Committee Member for Safety and Security JP Smith.



