This week, South African police attached a man to the back of a van and dragged him along the street for nearly 500 yards. This horrific case of police brutality was caught on film in the Daveyton Township outside Johannesburg: uniformed policemen forcefully handcuffed a taxi driver to the back of their marked police vehicle and drove away, in front of a crowd of people.The man, identified as Mido Macia, was found dead a few hours later in a police cell with injuries to his head and upper abdomen, as well as internal bleeding. The postmortem revealed that he died from these injuries, which Daveyton detainees say he sustained while being beaten to death. One of the policemen in question claims that Macia had grabbed his gun and assaulted him, like that excuses dragging a man behind a car and beating him to death as a form of self-defence.
While it's clearly an atrocious, shocking story, extreme police violence has become a regular occurence in what is supposedly Africa’s most developed country. An average of 860 South Africans have died in police custody or as a result of police actions every year since 2009. Police are often charged with brutality and corruption, and occasionally even rape and murder, which obviously aren't the kind of charges you want to see brought against the people being paid to protect you.They're committing the crimes they’re supposed to be preventing, so how on earth are civilians supposed to put any trust in them? Remember last year when the police shot 34 people during the strikes at the Marikana mines? Or the other week, when the lead detective in the Oscar Pistorius murder charge was taken off the case because, as it turns out, he may have attempted to kill a taxi driver in 2009? Despite all that, the severity of this latest incident has managed to shock a nation that's grown entirely accustomed to this kind of behavior.According to Jacob Van Garderen, the national director for Lawyers For Human Rights, Johannesburg, police violence isn’t set to disappear any time soon. “Incidents of police brutality are on the increase in South Africa, and human rights organizations and society groups have become very concerned about this worrying trend,” Jacob said. “The South African police service needs to reconsider its approach and move away from this old way of aggressive policing to a smarter and more professional way of approaching crime prevention.”
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