Gauteng’s crime statistics: A decline in serious crimes but a rise in kidnappings

The Gauteng police’s latest crime statistics from the South African Police Service (SAPS) for the fourth quarter of the 2025/2026 financial year have reported a noteworthy decline in several serious crime categories across the province.

This promising change has been attributed to the effective implementation of intelligence-led policing and high-visibility operations, coupled with strengthened partnerships between law enforcement and communities.

Gauteng provincial commissioner, Lieutenant General Tommy Mthombeni, delivered the latest crime figures during a media briefing before the provincial legislature in Kempton Park on Tuesday morning.

Mthombeni stated that the latest figures are encouraging as the province saw a total of 5,066 fewer cases of the 17 community-reported serious crimes for this quarter, resulting in an overall decline of 5.2% in comparison to the same time frame last year. Rape cases, in particular, saw a notable decrease of 9.9%, translating to 202 fewer reported incidents.

The provincial commissioner indicated that, most strikingly, carjackings declined sharply by 17.1%, while property-related crimes—including residential and business burglaries as well as vehicle theft—fell by 9.7%. These developments indicate that the various strategies employed by SAPS are beginning to yield positive results, as Mthombeni pointed out during his address.

However, the optimism surrounding these statistics was dimmed by the concerning rise in kidnappings, with Mthombeni reporting an increase of 38 cases—or 1.6%—in this category. Alarmingly, many of these kidnappings are linked to vehicle hijackings, shedding light on the evolving landscape of organised crime within the province.

“Kidnappings have increased by 1.6% during the period under review. This is one thorny area, honourable chairperson, members, and honourable Premier. While most kidnappings in the province are attributed to hijacking, our integrated multi-disciplinary intervention with our national anti-kidnapping, provincial organised crime, the E2 project, we have, together, arrested 616 suspects for the period, January to March 2026,” he stated.

Further breaking down the numbers, Mthombeni noted that of the 2,404 kidnappings, 1,307 of these were for carjacking and attempts, 415 were for robberies, 163 for ransom, while 118 included rape,17 for extortion, and nine involved human trafficking.

“Some of these cases have since appeared in the various courts, and some were withdrawn, while other cases are still pending,” he added.

Gauteng provincial head for Organisational Development and Strategic Management, Brigadier David Bender, unpacked the progress on interventions implemented during the quarter under review to address a variety of critical issues, including illegal mining, gang-related violence, human trafficking, kidnappings, and vigilantism, among others.

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