Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

Bigger than the army: South Africa's private security forces

From Victoria Eastwood, CNN
February 8, 2013 -- Updated 1040 GMT (1840 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • South Africa has 400,000 private security guards, and nearly 9,000 security firms
  • Experts put the industry's growth down to high crime rates and inefficient policing
  • Some claim that the industry is a threat to national security

Johannesburg, South Africa (CNN) -- Manned by a pair of trained officers, a large private security jeep moves slowly past the high walls lining a residential street in the suburbs of Johannesburg, South Africa.

Heavily armed and alert, the officers scan the designated area, looking for any suspicious activity.

They work for CSS Tactical, a private security company hired by local residents to patrol their area and protect them from any potential criminals.

"To be proactive, we need to be noticed," says Ricky Croock, managing director of CSS Tactical. "We need people to say 'hold on, there is a dedicated tactical vehicle.'

Govt. reforms threaten security firms?

"A tactical vehicle is a bigger vehicle -- it is more aggressive, it's a deterrent. So the first point is we want to deter as opposed to catch crime."

The security officers are well armed. They carry semi-automatic weapons and hand guns and they're trained in how and when to use them. And while only the police have the power of random stop and search in public places, security companies also stop people they regard as suspicious.

Read: South Africa's growing defense industry

From April 2011 to March 2012 there were 15,609 murders in South Africa, as well as 64,514 sexual offenses and 101,203 cases of aggravated robbery.

According to the country's latest "Victims of crime survey," 57% of respondents felt that housebreaking/burglary was the crime most feared in their area of residence.

In recent years, South Africa has stepped up efforts to tackle crime, one of the country's worst social ills. Last September, the South African Police Service said that serious crime in the country had been reduced by 31.8% from 2004/5 to 2011/12. But 2011 to 2012 saw a reduction in serious crime of just 1.9%.

"We only have the official crime statistics to go by," says Rudolph Zinn of the Institute for Security Studies in South Africa. "If you look at what the police would report annually in September of every year, we see over the last three or four years that crime has leveled off.

So-called violent or contact crime ... is about a third of all the crime reported to the South African Police Service.
Rudolph Zinn of the Institute for Security Studies, South Africa

"The more concerning factor is the high percentage of so-called violent or contact crime, which is about a third of all the crime reported to the South African Police Service."

And that's what has fueled the boom in the country's private security industry, crime experts say. There are nearly 9,000 companies and 400,000 registered active private security guards. That's more than the police and army combined, according to South African officials.

"The security industry is bigger than what it has ever been in South Africa," says Zinn. "I think the growth in the industry is definitely attributed to the fact that, let's call it a weak policing or ineffective policing, and it created the opportunity for private individuals to move into the market."

Some of those individuals have a military background. Waal de Waal, chief operating officer at South African-owned Protea Coin, spent 18 years in the special forces and military intelligence before joining the private security sector a decade ago.

He is today one of the 17,000 people employed by Protea Coin. Part of the multi-million dollar company's work is dealing with small-scale crime, like recovering fuel stolen from a petrol station.

The company, which also provides security at many of South Africa's mines and has been kept busy by the recent strikes in the sector, offers a range of services, including 24-hour property monitoring and protection against organized criminal syndicates.

"The role of private security companies is distinctively different to that of the police," says Petrus Van Niekerk, the chief executive of Protea Coin. "We view our role as private security to really aid and support the police."

I think the public can find themselves in situations where basically they are put at the mercy of private security companies.
Jenni Irish-Qhobosheane, Civilian Secretariat for Police

Read: South Africa bids to become call center hub

But what happens when private security companies take matters into their own hands?

The South African government claims that it's an industry that threatens national security and is determined to tighten its regulation. "A very dangerous situation arises if you have a security industry that outstrips both your police and your army and there is completely no regulation of that industry," says Jenni Irish-Qhobosheane, the head of the Civilian Secretariat for Police.

"I think the public can find themselves in situations where, basically, they are put at the mercy of private security companies who are unprofessional," she adds.

One measure considered by the country's government is that private security firms must be owned by South Africans.

"This type of move is going to frighten away foreign direct investment and I think that is a danger," says Hanes Venter, sales director at the South African arm of G4S, a London-listed global security giant. "Foreign direct investment is already down year on year but this is a worry from that perspective for me."

Whatever regulations the South African government eventually introduces, it seems unlikely the demand for private securities companies will diminish amid high unemployment rates, as well as widespread poverty and simmering industrial tensions.

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
Marketplace Africa
February 28, 2013 -- Updated 1530 GMT (2330 HKT)
Zambian economist Dambisa Moyo has been arguing for years that international aid stifles Africa's development.
February 21, 2013 -- Updated 1827 GMT (0227 HKT)
Thousands of striking miners march to the offices of Anglogold Ashanti in Carletonville on October 18, 2012. Thousands of South Africa miners returned to work on Thursday, just hours before a deadline to end their strike or face dismissal, as embattled gold producers tried to break the back of a months-long labour revolt. Around 2,800 striking miners at a Gold Fields company facility near Johannesburg turned up for their shift early Thursday, the firm said, while thousands more looked set to continue their strike.
Six months after thousands of striking miners halted operations, unrest and uncertainty still plague the South Africa's mining sector.
February 8, 2013 -- Updated 1040 GMT (1840 HKT)
Security officers from South African security firm CSS tactical.
High crime levels mean there are now 400,000 private security guards in South Africa -- more than the police and army combined.
February 4, 2013 -- Updated 1156 GMT (1956 HKT)
A ballet company in South Africa has teamed up with Harvard students to get business advice.
Harvard business students give a S. African ballet company advice on how to turn their art form into a sustainable business.
January 25, 2013 -- Updated 1713 GMT (0113 HKT)
US Currency is seen in this January 30, 2001 image.
Businesswoman Isabel Dos Santos, daughter of long-serving Angolan president Jose Eduardo Dos Santos, is Africa's first female billionaire.
January 11, 2013 -- Updated 1724 GMT (0124 HKT)
Shoppers make their way past a sale sign outside a clothing store on Oxford Street on December 24, 2012 in London, England.
Wealthy Nigerians are increasingly traveling to the UK to spend money in unprecedented numbers.
December 21, 2012 -- Updated 1222 GMT (2022 HKT)
A protester holds a sign reading 'Freedom and justice for women and men' during a demonstration in Cairo against sexual harassment in Egypt on July 6, 2012.
Mobile phones are increasingly being used in pioneering ways across Africa, helping to save lives and transform the continent.
January 2, 2013 -- Updated 1412 GMT (2212 HKT)
Solar Sister is a social enterprise aiming to eradicate energy poverty while creating economic opportunities for women in East Africa.
December 13, 2012 -- Updated 1752 GMT (0152 HKT)
Cape Town Film Studios is aiming to make South Africa a major destination for top-quality studio productions.
December 6, 2012 -- Updated 1014 GMT (1814 HKT)
India may be the world leader in call centers but in South Africa the government is hoping to grow its own industry.
November 29, 2012 -- Updated 1142 GMT (1942 HKT)
An oil platform of the US Pride company situated off Angola.
Oil has driven Angola's booming economy over the last decade -- yet many Angolans remain deeply impoverished. So where is the money going?
November 23, 2012 -- Updated 1607 GMT (0007 HKT)
Ecobank Group chief executive officer Thierry Tanoh of Ivory Coast attends on November 21, 2012 the 'What development strategies should African companies employ?' plenary session at the first Africa CEO Forum in Geneva.
At the first Africa CEO Forum, entrepreneur Mariéme Jamme witnesses the "great progress" that businesses on the continent are making.
November 15, 2012 -- Updated 1208 GMT (2008 HKT)
A conference to discuss proposals to restrict tobacco growing could have serious consequences for Africa's one million tobacco growers.
November 14, 2012 -- Updated 1318 GMT (2118 HKT)
A man walks along the Saga beach as children wash themselves at Lake Malawi, on July 17, 2011.
Following recent oil finds in Uganda and Kenya, Malawi hopes to be the next East African country to strike black gold.
ADVERTISEMENT