





Lima Declaration
Durban Commitment
|
The 9th International Anti-Corruption Conference
The Papers
A SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIP? ORGANISED CRIME AND CORRUPTION IN SOUTH
AFRICA
Anthony Minnaar1
Institute for Human Rights & Criminal Justice Studies,
TechnikonSA
Introduction2
Organised crime and corruption are often treated as separate entities
but in fact they feed off each other in what I call a symbiotic
relationship. While not being unique in its experience of organised
crime and corruption, South Africa is a relatively new entrant to this
field of experience. The main reason for this was the political and
economic isolation under which South Africa suffered as a result of
the many years of apartheid rule. This is not to say that South Africa
did not experience forms of home-grown organised crime but rather that
the levels of organisational sophistication, international networking
with other criminal syndicates and transnational crime tendencies were
not all that prevalent. However, in the post-1994 era the South
African experience has shown a number of interesting developments in
terms of the growth of organised crime activities in South Africa and
the incidence of corruption.
The South African dynamics at play
The first point that needs to be mentioned here is the fact that prior
to the first-ever democratic elections in South Africa held in April
1994 the authorities had never taken the issue of corruption seriously
or faced it in a systematic and coherent manner.
In the post-1994 period with the democratic changes that occurred the
media tended to report to a greater extent than previously the
incidence of corruption, especially within the higher echelons of the
new government. This, in my opinion, erroneously created the
impression that the new government had ushered in a period of
unprecedented growth in corruption, bribery, malfeasance, graft,
nepotism and patronage within its ranks and within the public service.
However, this perceived "increase" in corruption should rather be seen
in the context of the actions of a number of independent policy
institutions concentrating on aspects of good governance, a vociferous
independent press, and the establishment of a number of anti-
corruption bodies, inter alia the Public Protector, the National
Director of Public Prosecutions, the Heath Investigative Commission,
an Independent Complaints Directorate (ICD) and departmental anti-
corruption units inclusive of the special National Anti-corruption
Unit of the South African Police Service (SAPS) and other special
multi-disciplinary investigative units like the Office for Serious
Economic Offences (OSEO) and the Investigative Directorate for
Organised Crime (IDOC) and the recently established Scorpions
Unit.3
These measures, coupled with the implementation of a whole series of
new legislation4
aimed at combating crime lead to an emphasis on
catching corrupt officials. Finally, the encouragement given to such
campaigns as toll-free hotlines for reporting corrupt acts by public
servants, a public awareness campaign for whistleblowing, the emphasis
on transparency in service delivery, witness protection programmes,
and the institution of a Code of Conduct for all Public Servants have
all immeasurably contributed to the increased exposure of acts of
corruption, hence the increased perception in the exponential "growth"
of corruption in South Africa.
However, in this context it must be said that currently the focus in
South Africa seems rather to be on recovering public funds lost to
corruption. Bringing the corrupt to justice is a secondary priority.
The state of the criminal justice system - underfunded, under-
resourced, lack of skills, loss of skills to private sector, blockages
and delays in the courts - means prosecution is often not successful.
The establishment, inter alia, of the new Scorpion Unit is intended to
precisely address this. Moreover, the high levels of, the public
profile and media coverage given to violent crimes have made them a
priority over and above corruption matters.
Contextualising organised crime growth in South Africa
The incidence of organised crime in South Africa can be attributed to
factors such as:
- renewed international investor interest in South Africa;
- South Africa's favourable geographical position on the major
trafficking routes between the Far and Middle East, the Americas and
Europe;
- South Africa's accessibility via land, sea and air routes,
especially since its re-entry into the international arena;
- a criminogenic market structure. Unsaturated demand for and ready
availability of illegal goods (drugs, arms, vehicles, counterfeit
money, endangered species products, etc);
- criminal alliances, i.e. although different groups share a common
purpose, criminal alliances are held together primarily by their
common involvement in an illegal activity (e.g. excessive rivalry
within the taxi industry and strained relations between opposing
political groups) which frequently result in outbursts of violence;
- the large scale presence of illegal aliens/undocumented migrants
which has, apart from their role in crime (including organised crime),
led to an increase in the already intense competition for scarce
resources, services and job opportunities;
A number of social and technological developments have also combined
to create opportunities for organised crime. Advanced computer and
communications technology facilitates the electronic funds-transfer
system through which vast amounts of money can be transferred around
the globe within seconds, and faxes and cellular phones can be
encrypted, making it all but impossible to trace calls made from them.
According to Peter Gastrow South Africa's organised criminal
organisations are generally characterised by "the absence of rigid
structures and by their reliance on networks of criminals to assist in
achieving their objectives. South African crime syndicates appear to
opt for loose and shifting alliances and associations with other
criminal groups or individuals, rather than for tightly knit
organisations which rely solely on their own resources, to achieve
their objectives." 5
In terms of the growth of organised crime activities in South Africa a
number of points also need to be made:
- After the first democratic elections in South Africa held in April
1994 the country opened up internationally and was exposed to global
trends, both economically, politically and socially including crime
influences, to a far greater extent than was the case prior to April
1994. This had an effect not only on the policing of the borders but
also in the activities of crime syndicates for the smuggling in of
drugs, illegal immigrants, firearms and other goods but also on the
illegal export of stolen cars and endangered
species.6
- The spin-offs of weak or poor controls at the borders/ports of entry
are there for all to see, namely the proliferation of firearms, drugs,
criminal activity by organised crime/international syndicates, the
smuggling in of goods/contraband, fraud by way of not paying customs &
excise duties, roundtripping of vehicles and other manufactured goods
etc. This is not to say that lax controls and border porosity were the
primary cause of these criminal activities but that they created the
space which was exploited by all to pursue these criminal activities
with greater ease and a degree of impunity.
- Obviously such illegal movement represents an enormous loss to the
South African Fiscus in terms of revenue, customs & excise dues
through the fraud, corruption, smuggling of goods, non-declaration or
false values, forged manifests etc. Such a state of affairs has also
impacted negatively on international investor confidence, not to
mention other results such as firearm deaths in violent crime, health
hazards of drug dependency and other social effects.
- Many of the crimes mentioned above are inter-related or linked in a
symbiotic relationship. For example hijacked and stolen motor vehicles
are increasingly smuggled out of the country and taken to points in
neighbouring states for 'resale'. Funds thus generated are then used
to purchase drugs, firearms and other contraband, which are then
brought into South Africa and sold at enormous profits. Moreover,
large numbers of firearms have over the years entered South Africa
illegally. While in the 1980s and early 1990s these fuelled the
political violence in South Africa and formed part of the struggle,
post-April 1994 large quantities of these arms have found there way
into use in various violent crimes such as bank robberies, vehicle
hijacking, cash-in-transit robberies, minibus taxi-related violence
and attacks on farmers. Although it is difficult to prioritise
specific crimes the present flow of drugs, weapons and illegal
movement of motor vehicles can be cited as possibly the most serious
crime problems facing the country. All three somewhere along the chain
are linked to crossborder
movement7
and the exploitation of current
levels of border porosity (the so-called 'soft and leaky-border
syndrome).
The extent of all these crossborder criminal activities would not have
been at such a level if there were no corrupt officials at grassroots
level. In this instance it extends to border control officials
(border police and immigration officers to the customs and excise
officers at the ports of entry) all over the country who are
susceptible to bribery or assisting criminals and organised crime
syndicates in obtaining false or fraudulent documents or of accepting
forged documentation for a wide variety of goods or activities. A case
in point here would be the activities of the Aliens Investigation Unit
(AIU)8 of the SAPS.
In September 1998 more than half of the 24-member
National Aliens Investigation Unit were suspended on charges of
corruption inter alia having sex with foreign
prostitutes 9 as payment
for protecting them from deportation as illegal visitors.
Corruption and the public service
Corruption is a very emotive issue. International views often revolve
around such perspectives as 'corruption being the blight of Africa' or
even 'that the only way to get anything in Africa is to bribe an
official'. Be that as it may in essence corruption can be compared to
a cancer as it is truly an 'enemy from within'. I would like to start
with a generic definition of the act of corruption, namely
An act of wrongdoing which typically involves unethical behaviour and
illegality and benefits usually accrue to either of the parties
involved
Under such a definition we could very easily list such corrupt
practices as bribery, fraud, embezzlement, wrongfully influencing
decisions in one's own favour or benefit, nepotism and other similar
acts of wrongdoing, dishonesty or the breaking of laws. All of these
acts involve the breakdown of ethical behaviour and moral standards
where the rule of law is disregarded and not respected. More simply
put in the context of the public service corruption occurs when an
employee forsakes his or her duty for benefit. In other words
corruption occurs when any form of unearned compensation or benefit is
given to a person for any act or omission related to his or her duty
for which they receive a salary.
Unfortunately, more often than not the compensation is concealed in
many clever and innovative ways. These can include:
- All-expenses-paid holidays
- Free liquor and meals
- Free hunting/fishing trips
- Free invitations to sporting events
- Sexual favours
- Excessive discounts or free services
- Unearned benefits for friends, family or colleagues
Organised criminal syndicates exist in order to make a profit. Profits
are usually made out of serving the market for illegal goods and
services. These goods and services are often legislated into
illegality, or restricted access, for example, drugs, prostitution,
abalone or identity documents. It is thought car-hijacking syndicates
were originally established in order to raise drug money.
These organised crime syndicates can usually succeed only with the
assistance of functionaries of the state in the criminal justice
system and of officials responsible for policing or regulating the
particular object of "legislated morality". Such officials are often
easily "bought" by organised crime syndicates, who are able to garner
huge profits as the demand for their goods is high in a restricted
market created by the illegality or restricted availability of their
goods. The enlistment of such corrupt officials is an essential
ingredient in the survival and success of the organised crime
syndicates.
So, for example, corrupt policemen supply drug lords with police
radios and keep them informed of police investigations so that they
may evade arrest, elude the capture of evidence against them or even
"buy" or pay for dockets against them to be lost. Corrupt traffic
officials supply roadworthy certificates and registrations papers for
hijacked vehicles to be taken out of the country. Corrupt prosecutors
lose vital evidence. Corrupt home affairs officials may assist in the
supply of the relevant residency or other documents to illegal
immigrants who may be connected to organised crime syndicates with
international links, such as certain Nigerian drug groups, and Chinese
triads involved in abalone poaching and smuggling.
According to Mark Shaw organised crime syndicates flourish best in the
context of a strong, but partially corrupted state and organised
business sector, rather than one which has broken down completely. The
existence of a relatively strong, but corruption-penetrated state, as
in South Africa, allows organised crime the luxury of using state
institutions for profit, remaining relatively free from prosecution
while continuing to operate in a comparatively stable environment.
Failed states mean higher costs for organised crime: without state
"assistance", and infrastructure, there may be greater costs involved
in securing crime fiefdoms.10
In South Africa it seems the lower echelons have been penetrated with
corruption-related organised crime activities, but the higher echelons
remain relatively free of corruption. The weaker and more corrupt the
state becomes over time, the more likely that criminal organisations
will form parallel and competing points of power which will be
difficult to displace.11
Corruption, bribery and false documentation - a closer look at
immigration services in South
Africa 12
In terms of immigration services, because of their inherent nature,
these services invite attempts to circumvent established procedures
and obtain counterfeit rights. The desire to migrate to seek work
being perhaps the best example whereby significant monetary value
accrues to documents such as temporary and permanent residence
certificates, work permits, birth certificates and identity documents
which in turn attract the attention of all kinds of operators trying
to obtain them, falsify them and sell them to would-be migrants
seeking work. This situation is aggravated because organised crime
syndicates and other unscrupulous elements, even with international
underground connections, have involved themselves in this field. This
trend has become apparent over almost the full spectrum of immigration
services line functions in the process of obtaining identity
documents.13
However, without the connivance, internal assistance and co-operation
of government officials such corrupt practices would not take place.
Therefore a materially incorruptible corps of officials would render
crime syndicates and document fraud ineffective. Hence the prevention
and eradication of corruption (and the attendant document fraud and
bribery) would go a long way in slowing down the flow specifically of
the more organised illegal migrants who can afford to pay for
expensive falsely acquired documents.
A problem encountered by police in trying to track down those
officials who might be providing documents to illegal migrants, has
been the fact that these officials, when issuing such a document sign
with a different handwriting and use a false name. In other words the
culprit cannot be traced even if the fraudulently obtained document is
confiscated from the illegal migrant.
In one particular incident of fraud and corruption, it was discovered
that one official within the Department of Home Affairs who had been
providing false documents to illegal migrants was himself an illegal
who had been working in the department for seven years under a false
name. It was only by means of fingerprints that this was discovered.
In this particular scam, information concerning South African citizens
was taken from the Population Register whereby applications for South
African ID documents were made. In this way illegal aliens were
supplied with South African ID documents made out to legal South
African citizens. These documents were being sold for amounts ranging
from R200 to R5 000.
In one case in Pretoria in 1995, the police arrested members of a
large criminal syndicate providing illegal migrants with false
documentation. Hundreds of falsified identification documents, matric
certificates, blank birth certificates and fingerprint forms, as well
as stolen or forged official stamps were seized. The syndicate was
suspected of issuing false identity documents to as many as 4 180
illegal Republic of China nationals. The syndicate charged R900 each
for a false South African identity document. In another raid in July
1995 in the suburb of Berea in Johannesburg the Aliens Investigation
Unit (AIU) of the SAPS arrested two Nigerians and a Ghanaian for
possession of South African identity documentation collectively worth
almost R1 million. This turned out to be the single largest haul to
date of South African passports (119) seized by police in a single
raid. The passports seized in this raid turned out to be genuine but
stolen. Other documentation in this raid included false Swazi,
Nigerian, Ghanaian and Malawian passports, as well as 38 fake South
African birth certificates and 34 copies of foreign application forms.
In January 1994 another Chinese syndicate dealing with stolen and
false documents was also cracked by the AIU in Pretoria. In this
particular case, the method used by the syndicate to entrap officials
of the Department of Home Affairs was simple indeed - an official
would be approached with a legal application. As soon as this was
granted the applicant would thank the specific official by inviting
him for lunch where a small gift would be presented to the official
thanking him for his help. The gifts would get bigger and eventually
large cash amounts would be given for each transaction. Generally the
following prices would be paid: visas - R250 to R1 000; temporary
residence permits - R400 to R1 000; work permits - R3 000 to R7 000;
passports and identity documents - R4 500 to R12 000; permanent
residence - approximately R27 000; falsified bank certificates (to
certify that a person was financially independent) - R15 000 to R20
000. This syndicate had also recruited potential immigrants overseas
with the promise of work and a permanent residence permit. They
arranged to bring them to South Africa with a visa for a cost of R8
000. Between 1961 and 1987 a total of only 159 permanent residence
permits were granted to Chinese people in South Africa. In 1990 alone
1 382 were granted permits and for the period January to October 1991
a total of 1 959 were granted. However, in October 1994 the SAPS
reported that more than 30 000 forged work permits were currently in
circulation.
In 1993 a travel agency in Taiwan stole 400 passports from Chinese
travellers planning overseas holidays. These passports were then sold
for R10 000 each to criminals in mainland China and then used to
legally enter South Africa. In other incidents during 1994, 2 000
blank South African passports en route to the Mpumalanga province were
stolen from the Department of Home Affairs, while other consignments
of 1 500 and 25 ID books en route by train to Port Elizabeth and
Durban respectively were also stolen. A number of these passports and
ID documents subsequently surfaced in Johannesburg and elsewhere,
having been sold to illegal migrants for sums up to R20 000 (although
by July 1995 police pressure on supplies had pushed up the black
market price for a complete set of South African documentation -
permanent residence permit, ID book and passport - to an average of
R36 400 with a high of R72 800 being paid in some cases) or were
traded on the black market overseas.
Large sums of money (R5 000 for a work permit and up to R20 000 for a
permanent residence permit) have also been paid by so-called
undesirable immigrants from both the Republic of China (Taiwan),
mainland China and Hong Kong (the latter particularly identified as
members of Chinese Triad gangs) to private South African immigration
agencies, the latter's contacts inside the Department of Home Affairs
approving (for a bribe) the applications for permanent residence. More
recently, the implementation of the allegedly tamper proof new South
African passport and ID document in 1997, a measure that was looked to
clamping down on the forging of false passports and ID documents, has
also not been as effective as hoped for. Like most control measures
counter-measures were soon in place and used by criminals. One can now
obtain blank genuine passports at a price of almost R25 000
(presumably stolen directly from the Government Printers). There is
even a Singapore-based agency, which offers "an official Southern
African Government Immigration Program", which gives permanent
residence to applicants. It claims that this is being run as a poverty
relief programme whereby the money received in return for citizenship
is being used to fund various poverty relief programmes in Southern
Africa. The cost of the passport and identity documentation is US$4
500.
Wealthy illegal migrants also bribe or corrupt an official in the
Department of Home Affairs to 'create a background' by entering
fictitious names of parents, dates of birth and other details into the
computer database for Population Registration. The illegal migrant
then uses this same information on their application form for a late
birth registration. In this way such an application would be rejected
by the computer and would go through without any hitches. Once their
births had been registered they could legitimately apply for South
African identity documents and eventually for a passport.
A further angle to corruption is the exploitation of illegal migrants
by means of extortion and bribery where officials and police members
extort bribes from illegal migrants who have been apprehended in
return for their release. Illegals also pay the guards on the removal
trains and trucks to let them jump off during their journeys back to
their country of origin. Sexual favours have also been extracted from
women in return for not removing them.
The perceived high levels of corruption within official
migration/immigration structures are currently also a worrying factor.
A number of DHA officials were also arrested for granting permits to
foreigners seeking permanent residence. To combat in-house corruption
the DHA established an Anti-corruption Unit on 1 April 1998 and by
November 1998 a total of 57 cases had been successfully concluded. Of
those, 22 concerned fraud or theft and 17 dealt with aiding and
abetting, while 72 DHA officials had been arrested and 150 cases were
still under investigation.
Combating corruption
Corruption can be combated by governments taking the following steps:
- Anti-corruption legislation (criminalisation of the acts, setting
sanctions and punishments)
- Drafting Code of Conduct/Ethics which has to be subscribed to by all
employees
- Staff selection (thorough investigation of background - check for a
criminal record, qualifications and testing of abilities). Staff
selection also involves a clear job description with required
responsibilities and accountabilities
- Institute early warning systems i.e. identifying areas or conditions
that may be conducive to corruption and when signs show 'red-light'
them to warn against the situation developing further. Typical areas
of concern can be staff who never take sick or holiday leave (usually
cannot afford to be on leave so that a replacement cannot come in and
find out about their system); high incidence of complaints from
clients or customers; misuse of company/department assets.
- The institution of an internal departmental anti-corruption unit
with special adjudicative and investigative skills, equipped with the
best technology and having open access to all databases and processes,
ideally reporting directly to the departmental head
- The implementation of an anti-corruption hotline where information
can be submitted anonymously if necessary
The above represent some of the main pointers for managers to deal
with corrupt practices in their departments. Typically a professional
code of ethics would involve the following goals:
- Ethics in the workplace should be reinforced so that a culture of
honesty can be inculcated and embedded in public officials as a matter
of course
- There should be a commitment from the politicians and the political
will to support any anti-corruption initiatives (including support for
sanctions, summary suspension and dismissal if proven guilty of
corrupt acts and severe punishments
- Transparency and accountability need to be installed and accepted by
each responsible official at their individual point of execution in
the line function
- Rules and procedures need to be clearly stated and articulated by
informing all officials of them
- The practice of whistleblowing should be institutionalised and
destigmatised
- Adequate protection for whistleblowers (anonymity or witness
protection)
- Institution of suitable rewards for information
- Exemplary behaviour and conduct should also be rewarded
- Managers should provide moral leadership at all times
- Misconduct should always be subject to disciplinary sanctions
- Integrity training and ethics education should receive a priority
Some additional measures to specifically combat organised crime in
South Africa
Institution of a more effective, regulated and comprehensive
informer system which should ideally be closely linked to
Undercover operations (deep cover agents) to infiltrate and collect
information on organised crime syndicates
&Os
Use of entrapment operations. For this method to be successful the
authorities must be willing to make sufficient funds (seed money)
available to be used in such entrapment operations so that the
undercover agents can convince the organised crime syndicate being
targeted that the undercover agents are genuine buyers having
sufficient funds to make a deal
Better use of sophisticated crime intelligence analysis combined
with sophisticated computer technology
Use of legal covert technologies in particular such as telephone
intercepts and video surveillance. These to be implemented within new
enabling legislation
Improved protection for witnesses by providing an effective and
secure witness protection programme that extends all the way to
lifelong protection centred around relocation and the provision of new
identities if so required. This is crucial in the context of organised
crime's predilection for violent intimidation and even permanent
elimination (i.e. assassination) of any who dare to provide evidence
or stand witness against their illegal acts
Establishment of a centralised database and better sharing of such
information by different agencies combating organised crime and
corruption around the world. This is also premised on the setting up
of inter-agency networks for improved co-operation and co-ordination
of crime prevention by law enforcement agencies worldwide
Following the money trail, i.e. legislating for a clampdown on money
laundering to cut off organised crime's access to cleaning "dirty"
money and in that way disrupting their operations and profitability
Finally, specialised training, resources and equipment for better
border controls where a large proportion of organised crime's corrupt
activities occur
Endnotes
Dr Anthony Minnaar
Senior Researcher, Institute for Human Rights & Criminal Justice Studies
TechnikonSA
P/Bag X6 Florida 1710, South Africa
Tel: 27-(0)11-4713654 Fax: 27-(0)11-4713752 E-Mail:aminnaar@tsamail.trsa.ac.za
I would like to acknowledge the assistance of Jean Redpath, Contract
researcher for the project on organised crime at the Institute for
Human Rights & Criminal Justice Studies for her assistance in
providing information on some of the aspects of organised crime and
corruption.
The Directorate of Special Investigations (DSI), the so-called
Scorpion Unit under Dir. Frank Dutton, investigates organised crime,
violent crimes, political violence, terrorism, serious economic crime,
corruption in the police, criminal justice system and security forces.
It operates on a team basis with teams of special investigators headed
by prosecutors which work together to ensure investigation yields
enough evidence for conviction. The unit is loosely modelled on the
FBI.
Among the current legislation being used to inter alia combat
organised crime and corruption in its various forms are the following
acts:
- Auditor-general Act (Establishes and empowers the office of
the auditor-general who audits the accounts of the national government
and together with provincial auditor-generals those of provincial
governments
- Interception and Monitoring Prohibition Act (Provides
for the circumstances under which electronic and other monitoring may
occur)
- Investigation of Serious Economic Offences Act
- Money Laundering Bill (currently in front of Parliament, places onus on
banks for reporting 'suspicious' oer unusual movement of funds. Will
create new offences in terms of which money laundering may be
prosecuted)
- National Prosecuting Authority Act (Created the office
of the National Director of Public Prosecutions, and gives him
ultimate power over provincial directors of public prosecutions)
- Prevention of Organised Crime Act (amended as the Proceeds of Crime
Act) (Creates new offences such as racketeering and provides for the
forfeiture of assets used in and earned through criminal activity)
- Public Protector Act (Established and empowered the office of the
public protector)
- Special Investigating Units and Special Tribunals
Act (Units such as the Heath Unit may established in terms of the act.
Other units are still to be established)
- Witness Protection Act (Provides for the protection of informants and witnesses.
Protected persons are paid and moved to a safe place and provided with police
protection)
P. Gastrow. 1998. Organised crime in South Africa: An
assessment of its nature and origins. ISS Monograph Series No. 28.
Institute for Security Studies. Halfway House
For more detail on the exploitation of South Africa's borders see A.
Minnaar. Policing South Africa's borders: Post-April 1994 - The
exploitation of border porosity by organized crime and syndicates.
Paper presented to the Kobe Pre-Congress Confernce: Organized crime
and organisational crime: Frontiers in research, theory and policy.
Kobe, Japan. 19-21 August 1998).
Crossborder crime in South Africa
- Smuggling of 'grey' goods The extent of the abuse of the system
(non-declaration, fraudulent goods manifests (false values), bribery,
corruption, roundtripping, hoola-hoop schemes etc.) would appear to
indicate extensive organised activities and control by specific
syndicates. Goods involved include cigarettes, tyres, second-hand
vehicles, clothing and electronic goods. A further problem here is the
under-inspection of containers by Customs officials (only about 2% of
containers coming into South Africa are inspected, with inspectors
accepting at face value the goods manifests as declared).
- Illegal firearms The smuggling into and export of arms (to countries
like Angola and Democratic Republic of Congo using old Dakota cargo
planes by syndicate and organised gun runners flying below radar level
and landing at ground airstrips) is one of the biggest problems facing
border control. Firearms currently play a significant role in the
shaping of South Africa. The lack of success in controlling firearms
possession and in flows of illegal weapons has resulted in both the
creation and exacerbation of instability. The level of proliferation
in South Africa and its consequences reflects the extraordinary
influence which firearms have in South Africa, namely the high
incidence of violent criminality. There are two major contributory
factors to the proliferation of firearms in South Africa: first, the
continued growth in legal licensed firearms, and second, the
proliferation of illegal weapons which are smuggled across the
country's border or stolen from licensed-gun owners. Proliferation of
firearms in South Africa is also fuelled by weapons flowing in from
Mozambique and Angola and the continuing demand for licensed weapons,
which increasingly become illegal through theft and robbery. As a
result, neither legal nor illegal weapons can be portrayed as being
more responsible than the other for firearms proliferation in South
Africa. But, given that proliferation of firearms in the region is
fuelled by the illegal cross-border movement of arms over the region's
borders, attention has been given to tightening up border security,
inter alia to try to stem the flow of illegal firearms into the
country The upward trend in weapon smuggling into South Africa, with
its accompanying levels of crime, violence and instability, is likely
to continue, particularly since the peace process in Angola has and
will continue to 'free' vast quantities of arms. The institutions of
states within the region - particularly military, police and customs -
are far weaker than those within South Africa. Widespread corruption,
lack of accountability on the part of officials, limited manpower,
training and operational resources are just some of the factors which
mitigate against effective state, policing or border controls
implementation by South Africa.
- Drug smuggling Since 1994 there has been a dramatic increase in the
smuggling in of drugs (especially mandrax (methaqualone) tablets, the
drug ecstasy, as well as stronger drugs like cocaine and heroin. The
Nigerian drug cartels in particular have targeted South Africa as a
transit country. Young South Africans, especially white women are used
as couriers, particularly into Great Britain and Europe. The former
especially since South Africa's entry into the Commonwealth South
Africans have much easier entry. Since Nigerians themselves are
specifically targeted by customs & excise in the UK the use of South
Africans as drug 'mules' has increased considerably. South Africa has
become an integral cog in the international drug smuggling network
with cocaine from South America and heroin from Southeast Asia flowing
through the country. In addition, the high quality of South African
marijuana ("dagga") has led to the increased export - most often in
compressed packages sealed in plastic and hidden in containers -
organised by a number of domestic syndicates who control much of the
dagga growing, from plantations, picking, drying and transporting, in
the KwaZulu-Natal and Eastern Cape regions. (Turnover of this dagga
trade has been estimated as greater than the major agricultural crop
in KZN, namely sugar, which industry has an annual turnover of R10
billion). The drug syndicates in South Africa make use of a closeknit
web of corrupted South African officials that protect international
drug smugglers and foreigners operating in South Africa. An example of
the extent of the drug smuggling into South Africa can be gauged from
the following case: On 27 June 1998 the police made their biggest ever
drug bust at Johannesburg International Airport seizing 44 kg of
compressed cocaine with a street value of R13,2 million (US$2 million)
which came in on a flight from Sao Paulo in Brazil and destined for
another African country. A total of 117 Nigerians were arrested in
Hillbrow (inner city of Johannesburg) for drug dealing between January
and June 1998. Furthermore, a study by the UN Drug Control Programme
(UNDCP) found that South Africa, Kenya and several West African
countries had emerged as key destinations and transit points for
cocaine and heroin traffickers. In addition, Johannesburg and Lagos
(Nigeria) were now the main African processing points for crack
cocaine for further distribution into sub-Saharan Africa. According to
a US DEA report of 1997 more than 60 000 Nigerian citizens have moved
into the country - concentrated largely in the Hillbrow suburb and
inner city areas of Johannesburg - since 1993, many of them illegally.
They enter South Africa as tourists, overstay their visa period and
then illegally obtain South African identity documents and then apply
for South African passports. Some have claimed South African
citizenship through political asylum. Acording to the South African
Narcotics Bureau (SANAB) many of these individuals appear to have no
visible means of support, yet are living very affluent lifestyles.
- Vehicle theft The following have been among the most important
contributing factors to organised vehicle-related crimes:
- organised crime syndicates pay gangs to hijack vehicles;
- the lucrative income obtained from selling hijacked vehicles;
- seemingly ineffective justice system which often creates the
impression that perpetrators are free to do as they wish without
reprisal;
- the difficult task of policing crimes of this nature as when
policing one area/precinct the perpetrator simply shifts his operation
to another area;
- the occurrence of this crime tendency can, inter alia, be ascribed
to the availability of illegal and stolen fids (seed money) available
to be used in such entrapment operations so that the undercover agents
can convince the organised crime syndicate being targeted that the
undercover agents are genuine buyers having sufficient funds to make a
deal. Better use of sinter-relatedness of criminal activities. Vehicle
theft/robbery is linked to the illegal arms trade, drug trafficking
and vehicle smuggling, as well as money laundering. The extent of
vehicle theft in South Africa is accentuated by the fact that various
vehicle theft syndicates are currently operating in, or from within
South Africa. South Africa is undoubtedly the major source of stolen
vehicles in Africa. The SAPS has recovered vehicles, which had been
stolen in South Africa from as far afield as Cyprus, Greece, Portugal
and Australia. Vehicles have also been recovered from various states
in Africa, south of the Sahara, and vehicles stolen in South Africa
are increasingly being bartered for illegal drugs, especially Mandrax,
in countries such as Lesotho, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and
Zambia;
- the fact that practically every province in South Africa and each
neighbouring country have a different registration system, minimises
the chances of apprehension, thus making the task of the vehicle
syndicates that much easier;
- lucrative markets for hijacking vehicles exist. As a result robbed
and stolen vehicles and freight of hijacked trucks are easily sold on
the black market. Chop shops are selling stolen vehicle parts on a
large scale. This can be attributed to the lack of identification on
the parts. It can be assumed that a decline in the incidence of
vehicle hijacking will occur once the market for stolen parts has been
eradicated or severely restricted. This can be achieved by the
introduction of a parts marking systems and supporting legislation,
facilitating the identification of major removable parts of a vehicle
by means of the vehicle identification number;
- precautionary measures applied by some people and/or companies are
poor or non-existent;
- one of the biggest problems being experienced in curbing vehicles
hijacking and theft and the export of such vehicles, is the system of
container shipment. Due to a lack of manpower, the physical checking
of every container being shipped out of the country is impossible.
While several stolen cars have been recovered during spot-checks
carried out on such cargo, the possibility exists that many more have
slipped through undetected. In some cases the risks taken to smuggle
vehicles out in this manner are worth taking.
- Smuggling of endangered species and other exotics The syndicates
involved with the smuggling of endangered species often target markets
outside South Africa for their goods. They therefore do not depend on
a distribution network within the country but rather are dependent on
local criminals to poach the "goods", transport them illegally to a
central point where they are processed, packed and smuggled (usually
in consignments of legitimate export goods or dependent for movement
out of the country on false export permits or false declarations on
goods manifests, i.e. dependent upon a network of corrupt Customs &
Export officials. In recent years a lucrative illegal trade in
endangered coastal species, such as abalone ("perlemoen") and
crayfish, as well as such products as sharkfin and dried seal
genitalia, has been conducted by organised groups consisting of South
African and Chinese criminals (currently there are three known Chinese
Triads operating in South Africa, namely the 14K, Wo and Howards
gangs. For more detail see Rika Snyman & Bouts Wagener. An organised
crime preventative approach to Chinese Triad activities in South
Africa.
Paper presented to the Kobe Pre-Congress Conference: Organized
crime and organisational crime: Frontiers in research, theory and
policy. Kobe, Japan. 19-21 August 1998). These syndicates operate
largely from the Western Cape and export their goods mainly to Hong
Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and China (For more detail on a Chinese
syndicate's operations see P. Gastrow. 1998. Organised crime in South
Africa: An assessment of its nature and origins. ISS Monograph Series
No. 28. Institute for Security Studies. Halfway House, pp. 53-54.)
The national Aliens Investigation Unit (AIU) (established on 13
December 1993 in response to the alarming increase in undocumented
migrants/illegal aliens being smuggled into the country) mission is to
expose the people aiding aliens to enter the country illegally and to
ensure that South African citizens are not deprived of their rights
concerning job opportunities, housing and medical privileges. The
functions of the AIU are twofold: firstly, dealing with South African
citizenship affairs and secondly, with the issuing of permits. In both
these areas corruption plays a major role. The first function concerns
the organised inclusion of aliens in the population register by means
of fraudulent late registration of births; the unlawful issuing of
South African passports to non-South African citizens; the unlawful
granting of citizenship to aliens; the forging and unlawful issuing of
South African identity documents and South African passports; the
theft of South African passports during shipment to Department of Home
Affairs offices and South African embassies overseas; and the forging
and issuing of marriage, birth and death certificates to aliens.
Concerning permits, the AIU deals with the unlawful acquisition of
permits by fraud, bribery and corruption in the granting of visas,
work permits, temporary residence, the settlement of squatters and
permanent residence to aliens; the employment of aliens as cheap
labour; the housing of aliens; the bypassing of border procedures to
gain entrance into South Africa; and the unlawful issuing of forged
permits, stamps and bank certificates to aliens. The AIU concentrates
more on the organised inflow of illegal aliens - those involved with
syndicates bringing in illegals with either false documentation or
documents fraudulently obtained, (official passports obtained through
bribery). These illegal aliens are more often the ones who can afford
to buy South African ID books or passports. The organised inflow of
illegal aliens also relies on the bribery of government officials to
obtain official South African passports and other documents. However,
the supply and acquisition of work permits, temporary residence
permits and permanent residence permits are an even bigger trade in
South Africa than passports, but are more easily detected and
withdrawn from circulation than cases involving naturalisation or late
registration of births.
Trafficking in women for prostitution Since 1994 the SAPS has
noticed, and this has been revealed in a number of raids on such
establishments, an increase in the trafficking in foreign women for
the purposes of prostitution. Foreign women from as far afield as the
Far East, Russia, Bulgaria, Brazil and other African countries are
brought in (often lured by false promises of work as exotic dancers in
nightclubs) on an organised basis using tourist visas. Brothel
owners/pimps set them up in accommodation but confiscate their
passports and the women have to work under threat of exposure as
illegal immigrants, i.e. tourists who have overstayed their visa
period.
M.Shaw. State responses to Organized Crime in South Africa.
Transnational Organized Crime, 3(2) Summer 1997, p.2-3.
Ibid.
For more detail on this aspect of corruption see A. Minnaar & M.
Hough. 1996. Who goes there? Perspectives on clandestine migration and
illegal aliens in southern Africa. Pretoria: HSRC, pp. 153-158
The problem of false documentation is one of the biggest headaches
surrounding the question of illegal migrants in South Africa. Once
illegals are in the country they try everything to conceal the
illegality - from changing ether name, learning the local language,
having a South African girlfriend or wife, and obtaining a false ID
book. The latter is very easy to obtain if certain steps are taken.
Many illegals have used the lack of birth registration in the rural
areas to obtain an ID document. Usually the method entails going to a
rural town where there is no Department of Home Affairs office so that
the application can go through the magistrate's office. Magisterial
clerks merely fill in the form and send it on through to the regional
Home Affairs office. A late birth registration certificate usually
accompanies such an application. To get this, the applicant merely has
to ' hire' himself some parents who will attest (swear to under oath)
that he/she is their son/daughter and born in the area but whose birth
was never registered. In addition such a certificate is either
supported by an attestation by the local chief/traditional leader that
the applicant is definitely a local or alternatively by a false
baptismal certificate or school leaver's certificate. It becomes
extremely difficult for Home Affairs officials to check up on the
validity of any of these, although in some recent cases it was found
that the signee of the baptismal certificate and the church cited in
the certificate did not even exist.
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