Audio By Carbonatix
SAFA in conjunction with Gun Free South Africa will be marching to Parliament to campaign for stricter gun control in the wake of Senzo Meyiwa's death.
SAFA officials Danny Jordaan and Norman Arendse, prominent human rights lawyer George Bizos and social justice activist Adele Kirsten all addressed the media at a press conference to announce a gun campaign to honour the late Meyiwa, who was gunned down by robbers in Vosloorus last month.
Chairman of the SAFA Legal Committee Norman Arendse says he is privileged to be mandated to head the campaign for the handing in of unlicensed firearms.
"We want everyone to rally behind the campaign. This is a matter that has to concern all of us. It'll be given shape by a committee formed by the SAFA NEC," said Arendse.
"We are unable today to announce any plans … but there will be a march to Parliament to highlight this issue. We're unable to announce the date of this march but it'll probably be after the next [Bafana] match."
READ: 'Meyiwa gun campaign needs amnesty'
Bizos said: "It usually takes a tragedy for people, a country, to say something needs to happen as a matter of urgency.
"It's not only about the death of the wonderful goalkeeper but also of the other 17 deaths that occurred [that day]. It's a matter that needs to concern every one of us, every citizen.
"It is not an easy piece of legislation to compile but I would suggest that the Minister of Police, Minister of Justice and the Presidency should consider the issues of gun amnesty.
"Government needs to give serious attention to giving amnesty to those who hand over their illegal firearms. There are so many unlawful guns possessed in our country that it has to be brought to the attention of those in Government.
"Can we arrange an amnesty where people can go hand in an unlicensed gun without questions?
"If we know of a relative that has a gun that is unlawfully in their possession, don't expect the person to surrender it without guarantee [of amnesty].
"I would like to say what is not a solution. There is a consensus among some that the solution is to bring back the death penalty. [But] the constitutional court held unanimously that the death penalty is not a greater deterent.
"I would appeal that we do not accept that the death penalty is a solution. Let us rather persuade families of people with illegal guns to give them up."
The campaign committee comprises people from a cross section of society and includes Adv Arendse, Adv Bizos, Jomo Sono, Kate O’Regan, Judge Yvonne Makgoro, Archbishop Thabo Makgoba, Thoko Mpumlwana (Gender Commission), Pregs Govender (SA Human Rights Commission) and Gun Free SA representative Kirsten, among others.
Latest Stories
-
Welcome to 2026: Grace Has a Price
28 seconds -
Policy institutions must be held to efficiency standards despite their mandate – Bright Simons
6 minutes -
Gold trading losses raise transparency and competition concerns – Bright Simons
20 minutes -
Fuel was never rationed under previous gov’t – Mahama Tiah clarifies
33 minutes -
Gold cannot be managed like cocoa — GoldBod CEO explains trading model
1 hour -
Paga Youth Movement demands answers over suspicious aircraft landings at local airstrip
1 hour -
Sammy Gyamfi, Dr Tiah Mahama clash over Bawa Rock incorporation details
1 hour -
Claims that Bawa Rock isn’t a licensed gold trader untrue – Sammy Gyamfi
2 hours -
The truth about AI music nobody is explaining
2 hours -
IMF has right to call it trading losses – Bright Simons responds to GoldBod claims
2 hours -
Gold-for-Reserves: Self-finance aggregators struggling to compete with Bawa Rock – Bright Simons
3 hours -
Gold-for-Reserves is a BoG programme, not GoldBod – Sammy Gyamfi clarifies
3 hours -
Trump says US has ‘captured’ Venezuelan President Maduro amid large scale strikes
3 hours -
GoldBod hasn’t made any losses; we made over GH₵960m in 2025 – Sammy Gyamfi
3 hours -
No losses at GoldBod, audit will prove it – Sammy Gyamfi assures Ghanaians
3 hours
