Cable Theft: Root Causes and Approaches to its Reduction by Local Governments in South Africa

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Abstract

Cable theft is a major infrastructure security issue in South Africa, especially in Gauteng municipalities, where poverty is spatially concentrated to the extent that it has given rise to large-scale theft of electricity distribution infrastructure components. This essay focuses on the complexity of the reasons behind cable theft, including unemployment-related desperation, organized crime syndicates, governmental corruption, and international commodity markets. The study involved 19,919 reported cases from around the country and 5,914 cases from Gauteng since April 2019. It is found that cable theft is not limited to property crime, but also poses a threat to basic service delivery in the electricity, water, health, and education systems. The study reveals that effective mitigation should involve combined interventions using advanced technology (intrusion detection systems, smart meters, and mechanical barriers), enhanced law enforcement and prosecution, community involvement, and socioeconomic development measures. Evidence-based policies, such as special detection offices, scrapyard control, dedicated prosecution, and legitimacy programs that integrate infrastructure security and affordability approaches, are proposed as critical elements of sustainable reduction strategies. This study concludes that the solution to cable theft is closely connected to the constitutional obligation of South Africa to progressively fulfil socioeconomic rights; thus, municipal, provincial, and national governments must act in collaboration to address this issue.

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