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 We will shoot you dead, cops tell mom
    Candice Bailey
    November 07 2009 at 09:52AM
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A Joburg mother has been left wary of trigger-happy police after being warned that she could be shot dead if she drove her car.

Aadielah Maker's car was stolen from her Kensington driveway a month ago. On the same day, it was recovered in Jabulani, Soweto.

It had been with the insurance company for the past four weeks. When it was returned to her eight days ago, police had still not removed her car from the stolen list.

The Kensington resident said police had told her they would not be held responsible if they found her driving her car.

Maker's concerns come as the Independent Complaints Directorate investigates at least four cases of murder and three cases of attempted murder by police who implemented the "shoot to kill" directive by police bosses.
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In the latest case, Atteridgeville police allegedly shot dead 21-year-old Kgothatso Ndobe when they went to his house to question him.

In Mpumalanga, the Matsulu community alleged that two people were shot dead by police officers during a weekend raid that turned violent.

And in October, 28-year-old Olga Kekana was shot dead and three occupants were wounded when Tshwane police shot at their vehicle, which they had mistaken for a stolen car.

In Maker's case, police allowed her to drive her car for two days last week before warning her that, if found in her car, she would be shot.

Officers at Jabulani police station in Soweto, where the car was found, handed the car over to the insurance company but never took it off the stolen list. It was only this week, four weeks after the incident, when Maker went to Cleveland police station to delist the car, that they issued the warning.

"No one tells me 'Don't drive your car'. My kids and everyone are in the car. What if I just drove and I never did the clearance? Would the cops have shot me with all the kids in the car?" she said.

"The first thing they say when I get to the station is 'You can't drive your car. Any policeman can shoot you and we won't take responsibility if you are shot'."

Maker then became caught up in the red tape of trying to track down the policeman who could delist the car. It was only on Wednesday this week that she managed to have her car removed from the list.

But Maker is not yet out of the woods, as she needs to do a final vehicle clearance at the police's centre in Roodepoort.

And to add insult to injury, the theft of her car had come just two weeks after her car window had been smashed in Hillbrow - and officers in four police cars had ignored her on that occasion, she said.

"I was crying, and I drove past four police cars and no one stopped to ask me what was wrong and if they could help.


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