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Gang violence hits hard: Bishop Lavis shooting ignites demand for judicial inquiry

Theolin Tembo|Published

Four people, including an elderly woman, were gunned down in a house in Bishop Lavis on Friday night.

Image: File

Not only has the recent mass shooting in Bishop Lavis been condemned by the Muslim Judicial Council (MJC), but it has also sparked a demand for a judicial inquiry into the systemic failure to address gang violence.

Four people, including an elderly woman, were gunned down in a house in Bishop Lavis on Friday night.

The mass killing comes amid a deadly spate of shootings across the Cape Flats over the past two weeks, with at least five mass shootings reported in Mitchell's Plain, Kraaifontein, Mfuleni, and Lower Crossroads.

Bishop Lavis Community Policing Forum (CPF) has condemned the shooting, saying they are devastated and outraged by the relentless gang violence that continues to claim innocent lives in neighbourhoods.

They are demanding a judicial inquiry into: the systemic failure to address gang violence, the collapse of crime intelligence structures, and the flood of illegal guns and ammunition fueling this bloodshed.

“Enough is enough. We refuse to accept that our children, families, and elders must live as prisoners in their own homes. The government’s silence and inaction are tantamount to complicity,” they said.

They are also calling for an immediate intervention from national and provincial leadership, increased and visible policing in hotspot areas, accountability for law enforcement failures, and community-centred strategies to tackle poverty, unemployment, and inequality, the root causes of gang recruitment.

Bishop Lavis Police Station.

Image: File picture

GOOD Secretary-General, Brett Herron, has said that by Saturday morning, life had moved on, with no heightened police presence.

“In the Cape Flats, violence has become so normalised that mass murder is met with a collective shrug from government and society alike.

“Just last week, two teenage boys were shot and killed in Mitchell's Plain. Before that, it was a mass shooting in Gugulethu. Then Philippi. Then Khayelitsha. Week after week, the same story. These murders are not isolated incidents. They are symptoms of a city that continues to entrench spatial and economic injustice,” Herron said.

MJC president, Sheikh Riad Fataar, in their capacity as a senior religious authority and civil society stakeholder, the MJC conveys its concern regarding the prevailing and intensifying crisis of gang-related violence, organised criminality, and systemic insecurity that has engulfed communities across the Cape Flats and the broader Western Cape.

“The purpose of the proposed engagement is to initiate meaningful deliberations on the immediate and coordinated implementation of solutions. We respectfully submit that any further delay in articulating and enacting a comprehensive plan of action risks entrenching a parallel social order governed by impunity and violence,” Fataar said.

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