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Unpacking South African Youth Gangsterism: Causes, Consequences, and Solutions

by Zaghrah Anthony

When Survival Becomes a Choice: The Rise of Youth Gangs

In communities across South Africa, from Hanover Park in Cape Town to sprawling townships in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal—gangsterism is no longer just a news headline; it’s a lived reality. Recent research by the Commission for Gender Equality (CGE) sheds light on why young men are drawn into gangs, highlighting a mix of socio-economic pressures, absent parental figures, and the lure of identity and respect.

“Poverty, unemployment, poor service delivery, and lack of opportunities push youths to gangs for survival,” explains Thabani Mdlongwa, a CGE researcher. “Gangs provide an identity, admiration, and a sense of belonging that many youths aren’t finding elsewhere.”

Families, Fathers, and Failed Structures

Pearl Moabelo from Gauteng’s Department of Social Development points to family dynamics as a critical factor. Programs in schools attempt to educate children about bullying and gangsterism, but the absence of fathers, economic pressure, and an enabling environment for gang involvement remain persistent challenges.

“Adults sometimes unintentionally facilitate gangsterism, making it even harder for children to resist,” she notes.

Community Voices: Fear, Frustration, and Urgent Calls for Action

For residents like Mansoer Arendse of Hanover Park, the consequences are deeply personal. “Our children can’t play outside. We’re afraid to take them to school. Hanover Park is bleeding, and we need immediate intervention,” he says. Social media clips from the community frequently go viral, showing both the fear and resilience of residents confronting gang violence daily.

Abie Isaacs, founder of the Cape Flats Safety Forum, stresses that role models are crucial. “Absent fathers contribute to the problem. We need a multifaceted approach involving government, civil society, and the business community. Addressing social ills is essential if we want real change.”

Siyabulela Monakale, a gender-based violence (GBV) activist, highlights another dimension: women and girls often bear the heaviest burden of gang violence, facing coercion, sexual exploitation, and forced complicity. “Safe spaces, counselling, and empowerment programs are critical. We also work to dismantle harmful gender norms that perpetuate cycles of violence,” he explains.

Policy Gaps and the Limits of Enforcement

Despite a national anti-gang strategy, Solly Ngoveni of CGE warns that interventions are reactive, fragmented, and poorly monitored. Rafique Foflonker of the Western Cape CPF Board adds that volunteers are expected to do critical work with limited resources, calling for a comprehensive government-led plan.

Professor William Gumede of Wits University proposes bold measures: a state of emergency, military presence in high-risk areas, creation of special economic zones, and transforming schools into centres of excellence. Sports, culture, and recreation should provide alternatives to gang life, he argues.

Professor Nirmala Gopal from UKZN highlights historical and systemic factors. “Apartheid-era segregation and under-resourced social services left communities vulnerable. Gangs often fill voids where institutions have failed, offering protection, income, and belonging,” she notes.

Policing, Intelligence, and Corruption

Ian Cameron, chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Police, points out the limitations of SAPS. “Visible policing operations like roadblocks provide short-term arrests but don’t dismantle networks. Crime intelligence is under-resourced, forensic backlogs hinder prosecution, and corruption enables gang activity,” he explains. Cameron advocates for intelligence-led policing, lifestyle audits, and proper rotation of officers to restore professionalism and community trust.

Moving Forward: A Holistic Approach

Experts agree that addressing gangsterism requires more than arrests, it demands a combination of social interventions, economic opportunity, strong education systems, community engagement, and gender-sensitive programming.

“The problem is not just crime, it’s a crisis of opportunity and identity,” Mdlongwa says. “We need to provide young people with alternatives that offer the same respect, belonging, and purpose that gangs promise, but safely, legally, and sustainably.”

For South Africa’s youth, the challenge is clear: without urgent, coordinated action, gangsterism will remain a cycle that communities struggle to break.

Source: IOL

Featured Image: X{@channelafrica1}

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