SANDF joins police in year-long fight against gangs and illegal mining

A year-long military deployment just kicked off to rip apart organized-crime networks strangling South Africa's most violent communities.

Operation Prosper's latest extension
  • SANDF troops deployed on 1 March 2026 for twelve months.
  • Gauteng's illegal-mining syndicates are a primary target.
  • Western Cape gang violence is the other major focus.
  • Pre-deployment training is currently underway for soldiers.
What the operation targets specifically
  • Zama-zama networks smuggling gold get top priority.
  • Gang turf wars terrorizing Cape Town neighborhoods are next.
  • Firearms, explosives, and narcotics recovery drives the mission.
  • Key offenders in designated hotspots face arrest sweeps.
Broader strategy beyond boots on the ground
  • Intelligence consolidation at a national level anchors the plan.
  • Multidisciplinary teams will hunt syndicate leaders and financiers.
  • Proactive disruption replaces the old reactive-policing approach.
Lessons from previous military deployments
  • Operation Fiela in 2015 produced mixed long-term results.
  • Experts say soldiers stabilize but cannot replace sustained policing.
  • Human-rights concerns got flagged by parliamentary committees.
  • Violent crime dipped 3.1% to 6.7% since April 2024.
Economic toll and enforcement progress
  • Illegal mining drains billions in lost national revenue.
  • The Hawks logged over 800 arrests last quarter alone.
  • Organized crime charges made up more than half of those busts.
  • Cape Town businesses still pay protection money to survive.
 

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