South Africa crime rate falls 40 percent in coronavirus lockdown

Police minister says country experiencing ‘crime holiday’ adding that absence of alcohol helped reduce the numbers.

Former S. African president in court over corruption
South Africa, which has one of the highest crime rates in the world, is home to more than half of the continent's coronavirus infections. [File: Ihsaan Haffejee/Anadolu]

Crime-plagued South Africa posted a drastic drop in criminal offences, including sexual assaults, during the first three months of its coronavirus lockdown.

Crime rates dropped by up to 40 percent between April and June, when the country was placed under strict stay-home restrictions aimed at limiting the spread of the virus, Police Minister Bheki Cele said on Friday.

“These statistics show major decreases in all crime categories compared to the same comparative period last year,” Cele said.

He added that the statistics “paint a never-seen-before ‘rosy’ picture of a peaceful South Africa experiencing a ‘crime holiday'”.

“A 40.4 percent decrease in the number of rape cases were reported during the three months,” Cele told a news conference.

A security guard stands outside a liquor store closed under the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) lockdown regulations in Cape Town
Police minister said the figures showed that the absence of booze had helped reduce crime[Mike Hutchings/Reuters]

Contact-related crimes, such as arson and malicious damage to property, registered a 29 percent drop.

The country’s lockdown regulations included a ban on the sale of alcohol and cigarettes.

Cele said the figures showed that the absence of alcohol had helped reduce crime.

But he added that attacks on schools and liquor stores had risen, with burglaries reported at 2,692 education facilities and 1,246 shops over the same time period.

South Africa, which has one of the highest crime rates in the world, is home to more than half of the continent’s coronavirus infections.

To date the country has recorded almost 573,000 cases and more than 11,200 deaths.

Source: News Agencies