Who Truly Has Rights?
Cape Town: Gunfire echoes through the Cape Flats like a chilling nightly routine.
Fear has become a way of life, not just for adults but for children who have learned to distinguish between fireworks and bullets before they can even write their names.
On the night of March 4, multiple shooting incidents were reported across Cape Town. Elsies River, Mfuleni, Lavender Hill, Heideveld, and Nyanga were all marked with bloodshed and terror.
Elsies River, Clarke Estate: Shots fired in Echo/Hollow Rd, urgent police presence requested.
Mfuleni, Ulunthu Street: A double murder scene.
Lavender Hill, Military Heights: A shooting incident left residents fearful.
Heideveld, Bamboeberg Weg: Armed men threatening a family, forcing people indoors.
Nyanga, Mmeli Street: Gunshots heard, but police visibility remains low.
The most disturbing part?
No one fears going to prison anymore. The justice system has become a revolving door for criminals who know they will be out sooner than later. Some even say life in prison is more comfortable than life outside—free food, gym facilities, and networks that make them more powerful when they return to the streets.
Ordinary citizens, on the other hand, live like prisoners in their own homes, fearing that one wrong move could make them a target. The government preaches human rights, but whose rights are truly protected?
The police are outnumbered, under-resourced, and often outgunned. Communities live in terror, but the criminals continue to roam freely, knowing that the system favors them.
South Africa’s justice system must be reviewed urgently. What is the role of human rights if they fail to protect law-abiding citizens? Why do the innocent suffer while criminals walk free? It is time for the government to answer these questions before more innocent lives are lost.