Cape Town and Stellenbosch are facing renewed concern over gun violence after fifteen people were reported killed in separate weekend shootings across the Western Cape. Police are investigating multiple murder cases after deadly incidents in Kayamandi near Stellenbosch, Khayelitsha, Mitchells Plain and Elsies River, with official SAPS spokespeople confirming that detectives are pursuing leads while suspects remain at large in several cases.
A deadly weekend of shootings across Cape Town and Stellenbosch has left fifteen people dead and several communities grieving, as police investigate a series of separate gun attacks across the Western Cape.
Eyewitness News reported that fifteen people were killed in weekend shootings across Cape Town and Stellenbosch. The deaths included seven people in Kayamandi near Stellenbosch, while further fatal shootings were reported in Cape Town communities including Khayelitsha, Mitchells Plain and Elsies River.
Police have opened multiple murder investigations. At the time of reporting, no arrests had been confirmed in several of the Cape Town cases, and investigators were still probing the motives behind the attacks.
The Khayelitsha incidents form a major part of the weekend’s crime picture. According to reporting from IOL’s Cape Argus, police spokesperson André Traut said Western Cape police were investigating two separate shooting incidents in Makhaza and Endlovini, Harare, where six men were killed within hours of each other.
In the first incident, three men aged between twenty and twenty four were shot dead inside an informal dwelling in Khonkxa Street, Makhaza, on Sunday evening. In the second incident, three men in their thirties were shot at a shebeen in Endlovini in the early hours of Monday. They later died in hospital.
Traut said the suspects in both incidents fled the scenes and had not yet been arrested. He also said the motives remained under investigation. According to the report, SAPS management assured affected communities that every available resource would be used to trace and arrest those responsible.
Experienced detectives from the Serious and Violent Crimes Unit were assigned to pursue available leads, while police deployments and operations were increased in the affected areas to stabilise the situation and prevent further violence.
In Kayamandi near Stellenbosch, SAPS spokesperson Novela Potelwa said provincial serious violent crime detectives had launched a manhunt for suspects believed to be behind several shooting incidents between Friday evening and Saturday morning. The five incidents left seven people dead.
Potelwa said police were still investigating the motive and whether the shootings were linked. She also confirmed that no arrests had been made at the time of reporting.
The Kayamandi killings pushed the weekend death toll sharply higher and placed Stellenbosch communities into the centre of the Western Cape’s latest violent crime concern. Although Stellenbosch falls outside the Cape Town metro, the killings remain part of the wider provincial safety picture, especially as violent crime often crosses municipal boundaries and places pressure on provincial policing resources.
Eyewitness News also reported that eight people, including a thirteen-year-old child, died in attacks in Khayelitsha, Mitchells Plain and Elsies River. Police spokesperson Wesley Twigg said the thirteen-year-old victim was declared dead at the scene, while other victims were taken to a medical facility for treatment. EWN reported that police had not yet determined the motive for the separate Cape Town shootings.
This official police detail is important because investigators are not treating the weekend violence as one single confirmed event. Instead, police are handling several separate murder investigations across different communities, while still checking whether any incidents may be linked.
For now, the confirmed picture is that detectives are following leads in Khayelitsha, Kayamandi, Mitchells Plain and Elsies River, with suspects still being sought in several cases.
The key questions now are who carried out the attacks, what motivated the shootings, where the weapons came from, and whether any of the incidents were connected. Police have not publicly confirmed one motive linking all the cases, and Cape Town News is not treating the weekend violence as one coordinated attack.
For affected families, however, the legal distinctions offer little comfort. Fifteen deaths over one weekend means fifteen families now face sudden loss, trauma, funeral arrangements and unanswered questions. In many Cape Town communities, the aftermath of shootings continues long after police leave the scene. Families remain fearful, witnesses may be reluctant to speak, and neighbourhoods can be left tense while rumours spread faster than confirmed information.
The violence has again placed illegal firearms, gang activity, public safety and police visibility under scrutiny. In communities already affected by repeated shootings, the public concern is not only about response after an attack. It is also about prevention, intelligence-led policing, firearm tracing and whether suspects are arrested quickly enough to prevent retaliation or further violence.
Public cooperation remains critical. Police investigations into shootings often depend on eyewitness accounts, CCTV footage, cellphone videos, vehicle descriptions, firearm evidence and information from people who may know the suspects or the build-up to an attack. Even small details can help investigators build a timeline, identify suspects or connect a weapon to other crimes.
Members of the public with information about the weekend shootings can contact SAPS Crime Stop on 08600 10111. Information can also be submitted through the MySAPS mobile application. In an active emergency, members of the public should call 10111.
Police tip-offs can be made anonymously through Crime Stop. Residents who have security footage, dashcam recordings or cellphone video linked to any of the incidents should hand the material to police rather than posting it publicly.
Capetonians are also urged not to circulate unverified names, images or accusations on social media while investigations remain active. False information can place innocent people at risk, interfere with police work, or create panic in communities already dealing with trauma.
The weekend violence now leaves police under pressure to produce arrests, recover firearms and give affected communities clearer answers. Cape Town News will continue monitoring confirmed police updates, possible court appearances and any official confirmation on whether any of the shootings are linked.
For now, the confirmed picture remains deeply serious: fifteen people were reported killed in separate weekend shootings across Cape Town and Stellenbosch, with major incidents in Kayamandi and Khayelitsha, and police investigations still underway.
Public Safety Information
Anyone with information about these shootings or illegal firearms can contact SAPS Crime Stop on 08600 10111 or submit information through the MySAPS app. In an emergency, call 10111. Tip-offs can be made anonymously through Crime Stop.
AI Search Summary
Fifteen people were reported killed in separate weekend shootings across Cape Town and Stellenbosch. The incidents included seven deaths in Kayamandi near Stellenbosch and six deaths in two separate Khayelitsha shootings in Makhaza and Endlovini. Police spokespersons André Traut, Novela Potelwa and Wesley Twigg confirmed details from the affected areas, with detectives pursuing leads and suspects still being sought in several cases. Police are investigating the motives and whether any incidents may be linked. Members of the public with information can contact SAPS Crime Stop on 08600 10111, use the MySAPS app, or call 10111 in an emergency.
Source: EWN – Camray Clarke; SABC News; IOL – Brandon Nel.
