TechCentralTechCentral
    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    WhatsApp Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
    TechCentralTechCentral
    • News

      Apple revamps Mac line-up – all the details

      31 October 2023

      Big changes to Joburg load shedding schedules

      30 October 2023

      Ditch the ‘useless politicians’, top CEO urges

      30 October 2023

      Fight looming over zero rating in South Africa

      30 October 2023

      Compared: Starlink prices around the world – including Africa

      30 October 2023
    • World

      Facebook subscriptions launched in EU – no ads for R200/month

      30 October 2023

      Sundar Pichai defends Google’s business practices

      30 October 2023

      Vodafone is poised to offload its Spanish operation

      30 October 2023

      Apple is losing Chinese consumers to Huawei

      30 October 2023

      G7 to agree AI code of conduct for companies

      29 October 2023
    • In-depth

      Africa is booming

      30 October 2023

      Quantum computers in 2023: what they do and where they’re heading

      22 October 2023

      How did Stephen van Coller really do as EOH CEO?

      19 October 2023

      Risc-V emerges as new front in US-China tech war

      6 October 2023

      Get ready for a tidal wave of software M&A

      26 September 2023
    • TCS

      TCS+ | Fortinet, and the invisible tech that powers our lives

      30 October 2023

      TCS | Mesh.trade’s Connie Bloem on the future of finance

      26 October 2023

      TCS | Rahul Jain on Peach Payments’ big funding round

      23 October 2023

      TCS+ | How MiWay uses conversation analytics

      16 October 2023

      TCS+ | The story behind MTN SuperFlex

      13 October 2023
    • Opinion

      Big banks, take note: PayShap should be free

      20 October 2023

      Eskom rolling out virtual wheeling – here’s how it works

      4 October 2023

      How blockchain can help defeat the scourge of counterfeit goods

      29 September 2023

      There’s more to the skills crisis than emigration

      29 September 2023

      The role of banks in Africa’s digital future

      22 August 2023
    • Company Hubs
      • 4IRI
      • Africa Data Centres
      • Altron Document Solutions
      • Altron Systems Integration
      • Arctic Wolf
      • AvertITD
      • CoCre8
      • CYBER1 Solutions
      • Digicloud Africa
      • Digimune
      • E4
      • Entelect
      • ESET
      • Euphoria Telecom
      • iKhokha
      • Incredible Business
      • iONLINE
      • LSD Open
      • Maxtec
      • MiRO
      • NEC XON
      • Next DLP
      • Ricoh
      • Skybox Security
      • SkyWire
      • Velocity Group
      • Videri Digital
    • Sections
      • AI and machine learning
      • Banking
      • Broadcasting and Media
      • Cloud computing
      • Consumer electronics
      • Cryptocurrencies
      • E-commerce
      • Education and skills
      • Energy
      • Fintech
      • Information security
      • Internet and connectivity
      • Internet of Things
      • Investment
      • IT services
      • Metaverse and gaming
      • Motoring and transport
      • Open-source software
      • Public sector
      • Science
      • Social media
      • Talent and leadership
      • Telecoms
    • Events
    • Advertise
    TechCentralTechCentral
    Home » News » CCTV system hits crime hard in Jo’burg CBD

    CCTV system hits crime hard in Jo’burg CBD

    By Agency Staff14 August 2015
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Email

    CCTV-640

    A tall, nondescript building in the Johannesburg CBD contains one of the most important rooms in the city, unbeknownst to the many citizens and cars that pass it.

    It is the Johannesburg Metro Police Department and City of Johannesburg CCTV control room, and it is cited as one of the primary reasons why serious crime has dropped significantly in the CBD over the last few years.

    “I can say that there is hasn’t been a bank robbery, neither an ATM or cash heist, in the CBD for the past five years,” metro police chief superintendent Wayne Minnaar said at the control room on Thursday.

    “Serious crime is definitely reduced. There is still opportunistic minor crime which happens. Bag snatching, pick pocketing, that type of stuff.”

    CCTV has been used in the Johannesburg CBD for the last 14 years, with the control room set up in 2006 by Omega in conjunction with the city and metro police.

    “Omega is the company which installs and maintains all of the CCTV cameras in the CBD of Jo’burg and also provides staff for monitoring of the cameras on a 24 hour basis, seven days a week,” Minnaar says.

    “The cameras were initially just at strategic sites in the Jo’burg CBD. However, it has grown quite substantially and there are now over 400 cameras in the CBD and adjacent areas.”

    According to Minnaar, this has helped metro police and law enforcement agencies “tremendously in helping to reduce serious crime”.

    “We are very happy. I don’t think we would’ve made the progress we’ve done without the CCTV system,” he says.

    The system costs the city around R20m/year, with at least 50 people inside the centre at any one time liaising with officers on the street.

    Crafty criminals
    The city’s CBD boasts hundreds of CCTV cameras, but that has not stopped criminals from trying to thwart the efforts of law enforcement.

    “What we have noticed is that they [criminals] change their clothing after they have committed the crime so they cannot be identified easily from the cameras,” Minnaar said.

    Those seeking to evade arrest would even change more than once to try and make sure they cannot be identified when arrested.

    “We have a particular incident on camera where a suspect changes twice after a smash and grab where he stole a cellphone. He changes the top and puts it in [a carrier] bag,” Minnaar says.

    “Then he changed again and took the shirt off and was only left with a t-shirt by the time the officers arrested him. It’s definitely the same man because he’s still got the same carrier bag. The system that we use here, we call it a track and trace process.

    “They follow a suspect on foot from camera to camera or from area to area or block to block from camera to camera.”

    Beyond simply changing clothing, criminals have attempted shooting at the cameras, and in one case several years ago, used an angle grinder to cut down the pole the camera was situated on.

    “It was in the middle of the night at one of the Crown Mines hotspots and they used a blanket to cover the camera and they used an angle grinder to cut down the pole,” Minnaar says.

    To stop this from happening, the city has had to install cameras on concrete polls. Procedures were also in place to ensure officers are immediately deployed to cameras that stop working.

    “There was an incident where a guy was shooting at the camera and the operator fell from his chair. As soon as a camera goes down, JMPD goes there immediately to see what happened,” Minnaar says.

    Businesses returning
    The installation and expansion of CCTV cameras in the Johannesburg CBD over the last decade is partly credited for seeing businesses return to the area, a boon for the city government.

    “A lot of business has returned to the city over the past 12 years. Food outlets, Nandos, McDonalds, all of those,” Minnaar said.

    “That was part of the plan of having the cameras. To have people feel safe and for business to return to the city. There has been expansion where there’s been a partnership with business, particularly to the western side of the city.”

    Businesses such as Edcon and Gold Reef City have teamed up with metro police and the city to extend the camera network, with the system also spreading to the eastern side of the CBD.

    “The more partnerships we can form, the better. We will be able to grow the system as wide as possible,” Minnaar said.

    The system initially focused on certain hot spots in the CBD, but has now expanded to 402 cameras, 318 of which have the ability to rotate, zoom in, and zoom out. The remainder are fixed cameras focusing on transport hubs where petty crime occurs.

    “The camera footage is actually used as evidence in court which has been to our advantage greatly,” Minnaar said.

    “Where a crime has happened, then the investigating officers from the South African police use the very footage as evidence and are able to convict criminals with the footage.”

    The camera network extensively covers the entire CBD and its outskirts, where it is used for law enforcement, by-law enforcement, road management, and emergency service management.

    While used for these four purposes, any footage picked up and uploaded into the control room’s server room is not allowed to be used to “disadvantage any member of the public from a privacy point of view”.

    Johannesburg modelled its CCTV system on the British city of Birmingham, where according to Minnaar it proved to be very successful.  — News24

    Wayne Minnaar
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleCell C appetising at ‘right price’: Telkom
    Next Article Icann and the future of the Internet

    Related Posts

    Apple revamps Mac line-up – all the details

    31 October 2023

    Big changes to Joburg load shedding schedules

    30 October 2023

    Ditch the ‘useless politicians’, top CEO urges

    30 October 2023
    Promoted

    Accelerating IoT-driven transformation with HPE Aruba

    30 October 2023

    Tech is key to small business growth in South Africa

    30 October 2023

    Acsa aims for carbon neutrality by 2050

    27 October 2023
    Opinion

    Big banks, take note: PayShap should be free

    20 October 2023

    Eskom rolling out virtual wheeling – here’s how it works

    4 October 2023

    How blockchain can help defeat the scourge of counterfeit goods

    29 September 2023

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.

    © 2009 - 2023 NewsCentral Media

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.