By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Cape Town NewsCape Town News
  • Home
  • Provincial
    ProvincialShow More
    Western Cape Citrus Growers Win Major China Export Boost
    May 22, 2026
    Is the SANDF losing the war on Cape Flats gangs?
    May 21, 2026
    Western Cape Flood Damage Escalates As Farm Losses Run Into Billions
    May 20, 2026
    What’s Happening To Food Prices As Grocery Costs Spiral Across South Africa?
    May 19, 2026
    Flood aftermath update: More than 100,000 Western Cape residents now caught in province’s growing recovery crisis
    May 18, 2026
  • City News
    City NewsShow More
    Civic Centre Parking Lot Gets Greenlight For Major Housing Plan
    May 22, 2026
    Military land release could reshape Cape Town’s housing future
    May 21, 2026
    Western Cape Dam Levels Surge Past 70% Following Destructive Storms
    May 20, 2026
    Hanover Park Home Bakers Face Backlash Over City Compliance Crackdown
    May 19, 2026
    Cape Town launches tougher crackdown as illegal street racers now risk losing their cars
    May 18, 2026
  • Crime & Safety
    Crime & SafetyShow More
    Three Killed In Fresh Cape Flats Shootings As Police Open Murder Cases
    May 22, 2026
    Body of missing Masiphumelele man washes ashore at Fish Hoek beach
    May 21, 2026
    Cape Town Crime Crackdown Leads To 383 Arrests And R2.7 Million Drug Bust
    May 20, 2026
    Police Raid Bree Street Construction Site In Major Documentation Operation
    May 19, 2026
    Search enters critical phase after Cape Town teenager disappears in surf at Monwabisi Beach
    May 18, 2026
  • Business & Economy
    Business & EconomyShow More
    Why More Cape Town Families Are Turning To Side Hustles To Survive
    May 19, 2026
    Insurance claims surge as Western Cape flood disaster exposes hidden costs for homeowners and businesses
    May 18, 2026
    Cape Town retail confidence grows as R650 million GrandWest mall expansion officially breaks ground
    May 13, 2026
    Cape Town launches new manufacturing push to drive jobs and investment across industrial hubs
    May 12, 2026
    New Online Store Claims Prices Up To 65% Lower Than Checkers, Pick n Pay, And Spar In South Africa
    May 11, 2026
  • Property & Housing
    Property & HousingShow More
    Cape Town’s rental reality: why earning R60,000 a month is becoming the new housing benchmark
    May 16, 2026
    Why Billions Are Still Flowing Into Cape Town’s Housing Market Despite Record Prices
    May 15, 2026
    Cape Town homeowners warned as property valuations could impact municipal rates for years
    May 12, 2026
    Western Cape Micro-Developers Emerging As Unsung Heroes Of Affordable Housing
    May 11, 2026
    Cape Town’s Atlantic Seaboard Continues To Dominate South Africa’s Luxury Property Market
    May 9, 2026
  • Local Events
    Local EventsShow More
    Mojo Market Brings Africa Day Celebration To Sea Point This Weekend
    May 22, 2026
    Cape Town cyber security summit to tackle rising AI-driven threats
    May 21, 2026
    Cape Town Marathon Weekend Set To Draw Global Attention To The City
    May 20, 2026
    Thousands Expected At Cape Town Business Summit And EXPO 2026
    May 19, 2026
    Jive Funny Championship enters final week as Cape Town’s rising comedy stars battle for festival spotlight
    May 18, 2026
  • Money Market
  • Advertising
Reading: Is the SANDF losing the war on Cape Flats gangs?
Share
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Cape Town NewsCape Town News
  • City News
  • Crime & Safety
  • Provincial
  • Business
  • Industry
  • Politics
  • Home
  • Provincial
  • City News
  • Crime & Safety
  • Business & Economy
  • Property & Housing
  • Local Events
  • Money Market
  • Advertising
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
ProvincialBreaking NewsNews

Is the SANDF losing the war on Cape Flats gangs?

President Cyril Ramaphosa says Operation Prosper is showing progress, but continuing shootings across Cape Town are raising serious questions over whether the army deployment is working.

Last updated: May 21, 2026 8:54 am
By
Mark Botes-Lashmar
8 Min Read
Share
SHARE
Highlights
  • Ramaphosa says Operation Prosper has delivered positive results.
  • More than 1,000 arrests have reportedly been made nationwide.
  • Critics say Cape Flats violence has continued despite the SANDF deployment.
  • Communities still report shootings across several Cape Town areas.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has defended the SANDF’s Operation Prosper as a necessary and successful intervention against gang violence and organised crime, but the reality on the Cape Flats tells a far more difficult story. While government points to arrests, roadblocks and firearm seizures as signs of progress, shootings continue across Cape Town communities, leaving many residents questioning whether the army is truly turning the tide or simply driving through streets where fear remains unchanged.

President Cyril Ramaphosa told Parliament that the deployment of the South African National Defence Force to support police operations was the correct decision, with what he described as positive results beginning to emerge.

Responding to oral questions in the National Assembly, Ramaphosa said Operation Prosper had made progress in stabilising priority hotspots and disrupting crime in several provinces, including the Western Cape, Eastern Cape, Gauteng, North West and Free State.

The deployment, announced during his State of the Nation Address earlier this year, was aimed at tackling gang violence in the Western Cape and Eastern Cape, while also targeting illegal mining operations in other provinces.

- Advertisement -

Ramaphosa told MPs that more than 1,000 arrests had been made under the operation, including 550 in the Western Cape and 238 in the Eastern Cape. He also said more than 38,000 coordinated actions had taken place, including roadblocks and targeted tracing operations.

According to the President, the operation also led to the seizure of 18 firearms, 792 rounds of ammunition and 186 explosives. He said there had been a strong focus on dismantling drug networks and illegal mining syndicates, while arrests had also been linked to serious violent crimes.

But while those figures may sound impressive on paper, they are now being tested against the lived reality of communities still hearing gunfire.

DA chief whip George Michalakis challenged Ramaphosa directly, arguing that the situation had worsened since soldiers were deployed to the Cape Flats. He also questioned the cost of Operation Prosper, which he placed at R823 million.

His most pointed question went to the emotional heart of the matter: could government look mothers who had lost children to gang violence in the eye and say the operation was working?

- Advertisement -

Ramaphosa responded by saying he would offer condolences and sympathies to those mothers, while also telling them that government was doing more to bring down gang violence. He rejected what he called attempts to politicise the matter, arguing that all parties should want the police and the SANDF to succeed.

He also said the solution had to go beyond soldiers on the ground. According to Ramaphosa, reducing gang violence required a government-wide and society-wide response, including stronger intelligence services and an integrated crime prevention strategy.

That broader admission is important. It suggests that while the SANDF may be helping with visible operations, government itself recognises that soldiers alone cannot dismantle the deeper social and criminal networks driving gang violence.

- Advertisement -

The contradiction becomes sharper when recent reports from Cape Town are considered.

Despite the President’s confidence in Operation Prosper, shootings have continued across several communities, including Atlantis, Retreat, Steenberg, Mitchells Plain, Parkwood, Lotus River, Kuils River and Grassy Park. These are not isolated places on a map. They are neighbourhoods where families live, children walk to school and residents go to work under the shadow of gang activity.

That reality weakens the claim that the deployment is already delivering visible safety for ordinary Capetonians.

The SANDF has also refused to disclose how many soldiers have been deployed to the Western Cape, saying the number is security-sensitive. While that may be understandable from an operational perspective, it also limits public scrutiny over the scale of the intervention, especially when hundreds of millions of rand are involved.

Western Cape police spokesperson Brigadier Novela Potelwa said integrated operations would intensify over time and would be guided by crime pattern analysis. She said intelligence-driven operations would target hotspots linked to shootings, murders and attempted murders, while communities were urged to share information about firearms, drugs, extortion and gang-related crime.

Police also said more work still needed to be done to stabilise affected areas, with firearms, ammunition and drugs remaining key drivers of violence.

That statement is a quiet but important acknowledgement. Operation Prosper may be active, but the areas it is meant to stabilise are not yet stable.

Community voices have been even more direct.

Hanover Park activist Yaseen Johaar previously described the deployment as a waste of taxpayers’ money, arguing that the cost of bringing in soldiers, medical staff and support structures did not translate into meaningful change on the ground.

Heideveld community worker Vanessa Nelson said she had initially supported calls for military deployment, but later felt that soldiers appeared to be driving through areas without a clear plan to confront gangsterism and drug dens.

Those views reflect a growing frustration across gang-affected communities. Many residents did not expect the army to solve every social problem overnight, but they did expect a visible shift in safety, control and confidence.

So far, many say that shift has not arrived.

The central question is no longer whether soldiers are present. The question is whether their presence is changing anything meaningful for the people living with gang violence every day.

Government may point to arrests and seizures. Opposition parties may point to continued shootings and cost. Communities may point to fear that has not gone away.

All three matter.

But for Cape Town residents trapped between political claims and street-level violence, the test is simple. If Operation Prosper is succeeding, they should feel safer. If shootings continue unabated, then the President’s claim of success becomes harder to defend.

For now, Operation Prosper remains under pressure, not only from Parliament, but from the streets of the Cape Flats themselves.

Source: IOL – IOL – Robin-Lee Francke and Mayibongwe Maqhina.

Author

Mark Botes-Lashmar

Mark Botes-Lashmar is the Founder and Chief Editor of Cape Town News, overseeing daily editorial production and local reporting across the Western Cape.

TAGGED:Cyril RamaphosaCape Town crimeWestern Cape crimeSANDFgang violenceOperation ProsperCape Flats gangs
Share This Article
Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Email Print
ByMark Botes-Lashmar
Chief News Editor
Follow:
Mark Botes-Lashmar is the Founder and Chief Editor of Cape Town News, overseeing daily editorial production and local reporting across the Western Cape.
Previous Article Cape Town Marathon Weekend Set To Draw Global Attention To The City
Next Article Military land release could reshape Cape Town’s housing future
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
XFollow
PinterestPin
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow
LinkedInFollow
BlueskyFollow
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

Chinese Car Brands Are Changing South Africans’ Buying Choices
Traffic & Transport
Mojo Market Brings Africa Day Celebration To Sea Point This Weekend
Local Events
Western Province Club Rugby Fires Up With Packed Super League A Weekend
WP Sport
Volunteers Remove One Tonne Of Waste From Lagoon Beach After Flood Debris Washes Ashore
Community News

You Might Also Like

Provincial

Western Cape Strengthens Emergency Readiness Against Fuel, Water, And Farming Risks

May 1, 2026
Provincial

Army deployment fails to stop Cape Flats gang violence as drug turf wars intensify

April 27, 2026
Crime & Safety

Brazen Salt River shooting leaves one dead as second killing reported in Delft

April 11, 2026
Politics

96% Of Children In Crash Injuries Were Not Restrained In Western Cape, Health Officials Warn

April 4, 2026


Cape Town News is an independent digital newsroom delivering verified local reporting from across Cape Town and the Western Cape. Covering politics, city news, crime, traffic, sport, events, and weather.

Find Us on Socials

Quick Links

• About Us

• Contact Us

• Editorial Code

• Sponsorship

• Terms of Use

• Private Policy POPIA

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

© 2026 Cape Town News. All Rights Reserved.
Join Us!
Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss the latest Cape Town news...
Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?