Pubdate: Mon, 27 Sep 2004 Source: Cape Argus (South Africa) Copyright: 2004 Cape Argus. Contact: http://capeargus.co.za/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2939 Author: Jeremy Michaels MBEKI URGES COMMUNITIES TO TURN IN GANGSTERS President Thabo Mbeki has appealed to communities not to protect gangsters, especially those who are selling drugs to children. Instead of adopting the attitude that crime was a problem to be dealt with exclusively by the police, communities should expose gangsters and other criminals, he said in Khayelitsha yesterday. "If we harbour the gangsters, it is the same gangsters who are going to sell drugs to our own children," Mbeki said at a Twelve Apostles Church in Christ service in the OR Tambo Hall. In a clear reference to an age-old problem on the Cape Flats and many other working-class areas around the country, Mbeki said: "Here in Cape Town, the problem of gangsterism is made difficult because in certain areas people within communities protect the gangsters 'This is not just the problem of the police' "Drug dealers who bring drugs into communities don't keep them in their own houses but keep them in the houses of people in the community - and the people know who these gangsters are and they know what they are doing." Mbeki said it was the duty of the church "to go out amongst the people and say, 'We must stop that', to go out to all the communities and say, 'If we harbour the gangsters, it is the same gangsters who are going to sell drugs to our own children". Those who were committing crimes should be jailed and not protected by communities, he said. "The people who are doing bad things must be in jail - they must not be protected by us," he said, adding that the church had a duty "to educate our people to say, 'This is not just the problem of the police, it is our problem also'." This was crucial if negative perceptions - that the entire country was suffering from moral decline - were to be challenged. "There are some bad elements among us ..." he said, emphasising that not all South Africans were suffering from moral decline, as suggested by some, and it was the duty of law-abiding citizens to send a strong message to criminals. "This is one of our tasks, the task of this church, to go out among our people and say to our people, 'This behaviour is wrong, this behaviour is bad' - not to stand and watch and complain behind the person's back, but to say to the person, 'You must change your ways'," he said to loud applause from the 5 000-strong crowd. Mbeki also openly challenged the apparent notion amongst some evangelical churches that social problems such as poverty, unemployment and housing were not meant to be tackled by the church, but by the government. "The Twelve Apostles Church in Christ has a task to say to all our people, 'Let us join hands with this government that we elected to solve these problems that affect all of us so that none of us sits and stands far away to criticise and does nothing to help our country to change and improve so that all of us live better lives," Mbeki said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh