At least two cops attacked in past two days, but survey reveals police murders down

South Africa remains a relatively dangerous country in which to conduct police work.

On Tuesday and Wednesday this week, at least two police officers were injured in the line of duty, one in KwaZulu-Natal and the other in Cape Town.

The Newcastle K9 Unit’s Warrant Officer Sasha Naidoo is in critical condition after he was stabbed in Madadeni on Tuesday afternoon, reports the Newcastle Advertiser.

According to sources, Naidoo received a stab wound to his left inner thigh while attending to a complaint. He was rushed to hospital where he underwent treatment to stop the bleeding. He is currently in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), and is still in a serious and critical condition.

Head of Newcastle 911 community policing forum and close family friend Mornè Potgieter asked residents, family and friends to keep WO Naidoo in their prayers.

On Wednesday, the African News Agency reported that suspects attacked the Lingelethu West police station in Khayelitsha in the early hours of Wednesday morning, shooting a sergeant on duty in the face.

According to News24, the officer was admitted to hospital in a stable condition.

These two incidents come as the latest South Africa Survey published by the South African Institute of Race Relations revealed that the rate at which police officers were being murdered had fallen significantly over the past 20 years.

In a statement on the findings, the institute said: “Viewed by decade (1995-2004 and 2005-2014), more than double the number of police officers were murdered in the first decade after apartheid than between 2005 and 2014.”

Yet, despite the huge drop in police murders, South Africa remained a relatively dangerous country in which to conduct police work.

IRR crime analyst Kerwin Lebone said: “The police’s primary role in the pre-1994 era was regarded as that of defending the government of the day and police were thus a legitimate target for political attacks.”

He added, however, that it was a concern that such a significant proportion (46%) were killed while attending to a complaint, possibility indicating a sloppy attitude among officers when approaching potential crime scenes.

The IRR surmises that police murders fell as overall levels of murder fell, private security took over the first-responder role in many areas, and communities increasingly came to catch their own criminals and hand these over to the police.

Caxton News Service

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