President throws his weight behind calls for tougher policing against criminals
President throws his weight behind calls for tougher policing against criminals
Alarmed at his country's "abnormally violent crime rate," South Africa's president Jacob Zuma yesterday threatened criminals with a shoot to kill policy.
The announcement re-ignited a debate on the rights of criminals in a country where 50 people are murdered every day.
"Criminals don't take an oath to do warning shots," Zuma told about 1,000 police commanders in Pretoria.
The meeting was aimed at finding ways of strengthening the police service.
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Fired Up: President of South Africa Jacob Zuma at a meeting in Pretoria with over 1,000 police commissioners. |
Radical reforms at the meeting announced at the meeting, included changing the police service back into a police force, militarising the ranks, amendment of the Criminal Procedure Code, possibly reforming a person's right to remain silent and the definition of a suspect.
Zuma said there had been many arguments that criminals' rights must be considered.
"The reality is that people are being maimed and murdered.
"The question of the rights of criminals must be looked at, and while the critics will always be there, we have a national task to eradicate crime," he said. Source: SAPA