Scrap yards promote crime

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The Deputy Commissioner of Police, Kenny Kapinga, has warned scrap metal dealers that they face forced business closures and deportations if they do not cooperate with the police in their efforts to halt vandalism and theft of public infrastructure.

The scrap metal dealers will be placed under fulltime surveillance, with police posted at their businesses or police recruiting informers in their midst. "These are extreme measures we don't easily resort to," Kapinga said.

But this organised crime was leaving the police with little choice as ambitious national projects - including Botswana's becoming an offshore banking destination and an international financial services centre - were seriously threatened.

Editor's Comment
Human rights are sacred

It highlights the need to protect rights such as access to clean water, education, healthcare and freedom of expression.President Duma Boko, rightly honours past interventions from securing a dignified burial for Gaoberekwe Pitseng in the CKGR to promoting linguistic inclusion. Yet, they also expose a critical truth, that a nation cannot sustainably protect its people through ad hoc acts of compassion alone.It is time for both government and the...

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