Armed community members and vigilante groups have stepped in to tackle unrest in South Africa, taking matters into their own hands and sometimes stoking violence as security forces struggle to restore order.
Understaffed and heavily reliant on private security companies, the police was rapidly overwhelmed when riots and looting first flared last week in the southeastern province of KwaZulu-Natal (KZN), sparked by the jailing of graft-accused former president Jacob Zuma.
Thousands of soldiers were deployed to provide reinforcements as the violence spread to Johannesburg, the country’s financial hub.
But with tensions still high in parts of KZN and a toll of over 100, some worried citizens have taken up arms to protect their communities and their property.
Such grassroot mobilisations can easily turn violent and deadly in a country where it is not uncommon to own a handgun.
AFP journalists witnessed one particularly brutal incident on Wednesday, when dozens of local commuter minibus operators beat up seven township dwellers caught rummaging through the debris of a ransacked mall in southeastern Johannesburg.
The victims, which included two women, crouched helplessly against a metal gate, wide-eyed and screaming in pain as the mob clamped down on them with whips, sticks and rusty metal rods.
One man who tried to escape was hit over the head with a glass bottle and dragged back, blood streaming down his neck.
Eager to show off their prowess, the group proudly paraded to police vans parked outside the mall’s main entrance.
There, they handed in their captives, whose faces were swollen and their hands were tied tightly behind their backs. Some were released on the spot.
Residents had meanwhile gathered in a nearby cemetery around the body of a teenage boy, allegedly shot earlier in the day.
Acting Minister in the Presidency Khumbudzo Ntshavheni on Thursday warned against “a situation where members of the public are at loggerheads with the law after their attempts to protect …their lives and their own lives“.
“Do not infringe on the rights of others and do not take the law into your own hands,” she added.