- For the post-apartheid police force see South African Police
Service.
The
South African Police (
SAP)
traces its origin to the
Dutch Watch, a
paramilitary organization formed by settlers in the
Cape in 1655, initially to protect civilians
against attack and later to maintain law and order.
In 1795 British
officials assumed control over the Dutch Watch and in 1825 they organized the Cape
Constabulary, which became the Cape Town
Police Force in 1840. In 1854 a police force
was established in Durban
which would
become the Durban Borough Police and in 1935 the Durban City Police
(DCP). Act 3 of 1855 established the Frontier Armed and
Mounted Police Force in the
Eastern
Cape, restyled as the Cape Mounted Riflemen in 1878.
Overview
The South African Police was eventually created after the
Union of South Africa in 1913.
[210215] Four years later, the Mounted
Riflemen's Association relinquished its civilian responsibilities
to the SAP as most of its riflemen left to serve in
World War I. The SAP and the military maintained
their close relationship even after the SAP assumed permanent
responsibility for domestic law and order in 1926. Police officials
often called on the army for support in emergencies. In
World War II, one SAP brigade served with the
2nd Infantry
Division of the
South African
Army in
North Africa.
When the
National
Party (NP) edged out its more liberal opponents in nationwide
elections in 1948, the new government enacted legislation
strengthening the relationship between the police and the military.
The police were heavily armed after that, especially when facing
unruly or hostile crowds. The Police Act (No. 7) of 1958 broadened
the mission of the SAP beyond conventional police functions, such
as maintaining law and order and investigating and preventing
crime, and gave the police extraordinary powers to quell unrest and
to conduct counterinsurgency activities. The Police Amendment Act
(No. 70) of 1965 empowered the police to search without warrant any
person, receptacle, vehicle, aircraft, or premise within one mile
of any national border and to seize anything found during such a
search. This search-and-seize zone was extended to within eight
miles of any border in 1979 and to the entire country in
1983.
Reserve
The Police Reserve, established in 1973, enabled the government to
recall former police personnel for active duty for thirty to ninety
days each year, and for additional service in times of emergency.
Another reserve (volunteer) force was established in 1981,
consisting of unpaid civilians willing to perform limited police
duties. A youth wing of this reserve force reported that it had
inducted almost 3,000 students and young people to assist the
police during the late 1980s.
The police increased the use of part-time, specialized personnel -
such as the special
constables (called
kitskonstabels (instant constables) in
Afrikaans) - to help quell the growing violence in
the 1980s. In 1987, for example, the police recruited almost 9,000
kitskonstabels and gave them an intensive six-week
training course. These "instant" police assistants were then armed
and assigned to areas of unrest, which were often the most
turbulent townships. Even with training courses extended to three
months, their often brutal and inept performance contributed to the
growing hostility between the police and the public by the late
1980s.
Although the mission of the SAP grew well beyond conventional
policing responsibilities during the 1970s, the size of the police
force declined relative to population. In 1981 the police force of
roughly 48,991 represented a ratio of less than 1.5 police per
1,000 people, down from 1.67 per 1,000 people in the 1960s. Alarmed
by the increased political violence and crime in the mid-1980s and
by the lack of adequate police support, officials then increased
the size of the police force to 93,600--a ratio of 2.7 per 1,000
people--by 1991.
The police are authorized to act on behalf of other government
officials when called upon. For example, in rural areas and small
towns, where there may be no public prosecutor available, police
personnel can institute criminal proceedings. The police can
legally serve as wardens, court clerks, and messengers, as well as
immigration, health, and revenue officials. In some circumstances,
the police are also authorized to serve as vehicle inspectors,
postal agents, and local court personnel.
After
President Frederik Willem de Klerk lifted the
ban on black political organizations and released leading
dissidents from prison in 1990, he met with the police and ordered
them help end apartheid, to demonstrate greater political
tolerance, and to improve their standing in black communities. The
police accepted these orders, but did so much more slowly and
reluctantly than the military. White police personnel were, in
general, ambivalent about the changes taking place and divided over
strategies for implementing them. For decades the police force had
been organized around the authoritarian ideal of maintaining
apartheid. With wide-ranging powers, the police had operated
without strong institutional checks and balances and without
serious external scrutiny. For many, the government's new policies
represented an abrupt reversal in the orientation of the
police.
Through the early 1990s, police units were sometimes integrated,
but most police recruits had been trained in single-race classes,
sometimes in institutions designated for one racial group. For
example, most black police personnel had trained at Hammanskraal,
near Pretoria; most whites, in Pretoria; most coloureds, Bishop
Lavis, near Cape Town; and Asians at Chatsworth, near
Durban
[210216]. As the apartheid era ended, these programs
were restructured to emphasize racial tolerance and respect for
basic human rights.The first racially integrated intake of recruits
began slowly in 1993 and integration was complete by 1995. Today
there is only one Police College to train new recruits in Pretoria.
The police also increased recruitment among black youth and hired
international police training experts to advise them on ways to
improve race relations in the service.
The basic police training regimen includes courses in criminal
investigation procedures, self-defense, weapons handling, drills,
inspections, public relations and law. Specialized courses include
crowd and riot control, detective skills, horsemanship and
veterinary training, and advanced-level management skills.
Since
1990, South Africa also has provided training for police from
Lesotho
, Swaziland
, Malawi
and the
(then) Zaire
.
Police officers on duty generally carry a Z88 9mm
pistol (although a more compact pistol, the
RAP 401, is available if officers request it) and
pepper spray. A
truncheon of similar design to the American
nightstick called the PR-24 tonfa was issued until about 2004 until
it was replaced by the issue of pepper spray. Each police patrol
now usually also has an
R-5 rifle
in the car. To quell disturbances, the SAP used a variety of arms,
including 37-millimeter "stopper guns", which could shoot tear gas,
rubber bullets or signal flares; twelve-gauge Browning
semi-automatic and Beretta pump-action
shotguns;, R-1 semi-automatic
rifles and HMC sub-machine gun. The 37mm stopper guns
were phased out of use during the mid 1990's and are no longer
used. The Browning and Beretta RS202P shotguns have been replaced
by the locally manufactured Musler 12 gauge shotgun which is
capable of firing the new generation of anti-riot rubber bullets
which are contained in a standard 12 bore shotgun cartridge as well
as
tear gas grenades using a so-called
ballistic cartridge and pencil flares. The R1 rifle has been
withdrawn from all police armouries since the mid-1990s as has the
old standard HMC sub-machine gun. Through the early 1990s, the
police were also equipped with smoke and tear-gas dispensing
vehicles, tank trucks with water cannons, vehicles that dispensed
barbed wire or razor wire to cordon off areas rapidly, and a small
number of helicopters capable of dropping "water bombs" on crowds
of demonstrators. Riot-control forces deployed in specially
designed buses or
Casspir armoured personnel
carriers.
The climate of escalating violence in the early 1990s often posed
even greater challenges to the police than they had faced in the
1980s, as violence shifted from anti-government activity to a
mosaic of political rivalries and factional clashes. At the same
time, many South Africans feared that the police were causing some
of the criminal and political violence, and they demanded immediate
changes in the police force to mark the end of apartheid-era
injustices.
To meet the new challenges, the 91,000 active police personnel in
1991, including administrative and support personnel, were
increased to more than 110,000 by 1993 and 140,000 by 1995.
Throughout this time, police reserves numbered at least 37,000. In
1996 the combined active and reserve police represented a
police-to-population ratio of almost 4.0 per 1,000.
As part of the overall reorganization of the police, the government
merged the formerly dreaded Criminal Investigation Department (CID)
and the police security branch to form a Crime Combatting and
Investigation (CCI) Division. The new CCI, with responsibility for
reversing the rising crime rate, combined the intelligence and
operational resources of the security police with the anticrime
capabilities of the CID.
Minister of Law and Order
Hernus Kriel
in 1991 also appointed an
ombudsman to
investigate allegations of police misconduct. He increased the
recruitment of black police personnel, formed a civilian
riot-control unit that was separate from the SAP but worked with
it, developed a code of police conduct agreed upon by a number of
political parties and communities, and substantially increased
police training facilities. In 1992 Kriel began restructuring the
SAP into a three-tiered force consisting of a national police,
primarily responsible for internal security and for serious crime;
autonomous regional forces, responsible for crime prevention and
for matters of general law and order; and municipal police,
responsible for local law enforcement and for minor criminal
matters. He also established police/community forums in almost
every police station.
After apartheid the force was renamed the
South African Police
Service.
References
See also
Historical secret police organizations