Showing posts with label Gangs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gangs. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 April 2019

Criminal Gangs Spring Back To Life In Kitwe


By Paul Shalala
Kitwe District Commissioner Binwell Mpundu addressing residents
of Miseshi last week -Picture by Time Photograpy

Exactly 22 days before the Kitwe High Court rules on the fate of the 18 Tokota Gang members, two other previously unknown gangs have sprung up in Kitwe.

The Unruly and Sokota Gangs have established themselves in the western half of Zambia’s second largest city, terrorizing residents especially at night.

According to some residents, the gangs are involved in a number of burglaries and petty thefts.

At a meeting held recently to sort out the security lapse in the area, residents complained that the local Community Crime Prevention Unit (CCPU), which are a creation of the Zambia Police Service, are not helping.

“We want a neighbourhood watch group comprised energetic people, not these old men in CCPU,” said one resident.

The residents also wondered why Police officers are no longer present at night to conduct patrols in the badly affected areas of Mindolo, Miseshi and D Section.

The meeting later resolved to form two neighbourhood watch groups to be spearheaded by youth leaders Bernard Mwila and Michael Katoma.

The neighbourhood watch communities have been formed under the slogan "The Security of my community is my responsibility."

Despite members of the public knowing the gang members terrorizing their community, they are scared to report them to the Police.

“The sad part is that the members of the community in Miseshi actually know who these criminals are but are scared to disclose their identities. So the challenge I give them is that they should never cry foul if they don't do the noble duty of furnishing information to the security wings,” said Binwell Mpundu, Kitwe District Commissioner.

Mr. Mpundu, who is the head of government in Kitwe and is in charge of all state security agencies in the district, went on to give advise to the community.

“I just want to warn parents who are habouring these criminals that they risk being prosecuted for aiding, abetting or otherwise shielding these criminals or else they have a task to transform their children into responsible citizens before the law visits them.”
Bernard Mwila (in red), one of the Youths to lead the local
neighbourhood watch groups

Last year, fear gripped almost all neighbourhoods in Kitwe as various criminal gangs terrorised this major mining town, raping, beating and stealing from people especially at night.

The gangs such as the Tokota Boys, Sons Of the Devil (SOD), The 100s, (0 Niggas, 70 Niggas, Mbwambwambwa and many others disappeared when the Zambia Police Service launched a vicious crackdown in May 2018.

Dozens of gang members were arrested, prosecuted and a number of them jailed for their criminal activities.

Some of them such the 18 Tokota Boys are awaiting judgement in the High Court next month.

Their arrests brought jubilation in the city but the old days are back as new gangs have taken over territory which other gangs held last year.

Sunday, 16 September 2018

90 Niggas Gang Members Convicted

By Paul Shalala

The Kitwe Magistrate’s Court has convicted 13 suspected members of the notorious 90 Niggas gang for conduct likely to cause the breach of peace.

The 90 Niggas gang is one of the newest teenage gangs in Kitwe which sprung up early this year. 

Passing judgement this morning, Kitwe Magistrate Malota Phiri found the 13 teenage gang members guilty of the offence they were charged with.

The 13 have since been remanded in the Kamfinsa Correctional Facility awaiting sentencing next month.

They are mostly youths from Kitwe’s Bulangililo Compound who are alleged to have blocked roads in Kwacha and Bulangililo compounds on 25 April, thereby disturbing peace.

The juveniles are aged between 13 and 17 are mostly pupils and unemployed youths.

Passing judgement of Friday in a case which took five months, Magistrate Phiri said the 13 guilty were guilty of the offence they were charged with.

Magistrate Phiri could not sentence them because they are juveniles.

They have since been remanded in custody and will appear in court again on 2nd October for Social Welfare Report and possible sentencing.

And in another courtroom, two surities who signed bail for a 24 year old Pastor of Kitwe have been sent to prison for failure to avail him to court this morning.

Pastor Alick Simbeye, who is facing a charge of defilement, has not been appearing in court since he was granted bail last month.

On Friday when the case came up before Principal Resident Magistrate Chongo Musonda, the two surities 53 year old John Kapisa and Peter Muleba struggled to explain the Pastor’s whereabouts.

Mr Kapisa, who is a Pastor in one of the Pentecostal Churches, told the court that they had failed to locate the accused but that he had been communicating with some people and he is within Kitwe.

Magistrate Musonda said she had been too lenient to the surities following the disappearance of the accused.

She later sent the two to prison pending the payment of the bond sum.

The two surities were bonded for 10 thousand kwacha each when they signed bail for Pastor Simbeye.

The case has since been adjourned to 21 September.

Pastor Simbeye is alleged to have had carnal knowledge of a girl below the age of 16 on 25 July on his way from an overnight prayer session at church.

He allegedly defiled the girl at the back of his car while another girl was sleeping in the car.

Monday, 13 August 2018

Tokota Boys Gang Members Finally Appear In The High Court

Tokota Boys leaving the Kitwe High Court after taking
plea yesterday. -Picture by Mushota Mpundu 
By Paul Shalala
The 19 suspected Tokota Boys this morning appeared for the first time in the Kitwe High Court.

Since they were arrested in May this year, the youths had been appearing before the Kitwe Magistrates Court for mention as they awaited for committal to the High Court by the Director of Public Prosecutions.

The 19, who are mostly bus drivers, bus conductors, shop keepers and unemployed youths, appeared before Judge Timothy Katanekwa for plea.

The youths are jointly charged in three separate counts which could not be tried at the Magistrates Court following their arrest three months ago.

The Tokota Boys, some of whom were smartly dressed in suits and ties, pleaded not guilty to Acts Intended to Cause Grievious Harm, Unlawful wounding or Poisoning and Kidnapping or abduction.

The three charges rose from a a video where the gang members were seen beating a 16 year old boy of Mulenga Compound who they forced to eat his own faeces.

The matter has been adjourned to Wednesday this week for possible commencement of trial.

In this case, the State is being represented by four state advocates Jinjimali Mpopwe Sililo, Mwangala Mwala, Dean Akalemwa and they are led by Acting Chief State Advocate Mercy Lungu.

The suspected Tokota Boys are being represented by only two lawyers from the Legal Aid Board Mwendalubi Kapukutula and Maria Nzala.

Meanwhile, Judge Katanekwa has set tomorrow as the date for an inquiry to ascertain whether one of the Tokota Boys gang members is 20 years old as claimed by the state.

This follows an application by the suspect who told the court, through his lawyers, that he is a minor.

Their appearance in the Kitwe High Court is separate from three other cases some of the 19 suspected Tokota Boys gang members are facing in the Kitwe Magistrates Court which are currently on trial stage.

And three men who are charged with causing death by dangerous driving have pleaded guilty before the Kitwe High Court.

The three, Kalonga Mtolo, Charles Mumbelunga, and Christopher Milandu, who appeared separately, are from Kitwe, Chambeshi and Chingola and their cases have been adjourned to Thursday this week for presentation of facts.

Meanwhile, in the Kitwe Magistrates Court, a 24 year old alleged Pastor has pleaded not guilty to one count of Defilement.

Alick Simbeye of Buchi Compound appeared in court this morning charged with Defilement of a child under the age of 16 contrally to section 16 chapter 138 of the Laws of Zambia.

When he appeared for plea before Kitwe Principal Magistrate Chongo Musonda, Mr Simbeye identified himself as a businessman as opposed to what he is known for as a Pastor.

The case has been adjourned to 20 August and the suspect has since been granted a 10 thousand Kwacha cash bail with two traceable surities.
Facts before the court are that Mr Simbeye of Buchi Compound had carnal knowledge of the girl in the early hours of 25 July this year.

The case has been adjourned to 20 August and the suspect has since been granted a 10 thousand Kwacha cash bail with two traceable surities.

Magistrate Musonda said the two surities should also be bonded for 10 thousand Kwacha each.

Mr Simbeye has since been remanded in custody as bail conditions are being sorted out.

Tuesday, 22 May 2018

Several Criminal Gangs "Take Over" Zambia's Second Largest City

Police Anti-Robbery officers lead 90 Niggas Gang member 
Martin Nkonde (in black shirt) to prison after being sentenced to five
years in jail for assault -Picture by Matthews Kabamba

By Paul Shalala

About seven teenage gangs have “over run’ Kitwe, Zambia’s second largest city, literally “taking over” several residential areas and brutalizing residents especially at night.

According to Wikipedia, Kitwe, which is a mining town in Zambia's mineral-rich Copperbelt Province, has the second largest population after the capital Lusaka.

Several criminal gangs, which are composed of dozens of members, ambush and beat up Kitwe residents at night and grab whatever is found on them.

Police officers have been battling these gangs without much success.

In the past one year, over 200 gang members, mostly teenagers, have been arrested but this has not stopped the gangs from attracting more members.

These gang members have been taken to court and so far, only four convictions have been secured.

In some cases, complainants have abandoned the court process and suspects end up being released by the courts.

But which are these gangs?

Who leads them and where do they operate from? These are the questions this article seeks to answer.

This blogger has reported extensively on these gangs since 2015 and in this article, he shares what he has gathered so far.

Motivation

Like many other mining towns, Kitwe has a large population of miners both working within town and in nearby mining towns.

However, there are of course some youths who are not employed.

One school of thought believes that some of the gang members are unemployed youths who want to earn a living by stealing from their victims.

This could be true on the part of The Hundreds Gang whose members are above 18 years, these could be school leavers.

But it may not be true with Tokota Boys, 90 Niggas and Sons Of the Devil Gangs who have members as young as 15 years, school age boys who have nothing to do with employment.

These are boys who are in Grades seven to nine who are perhaps joining the gangs for prestige purposes.

The other school of thought thinks these are just criminal elements who are trying to earn a mark in society as "real men."

They could be trying to copy what "Jerabos" did in the past years.

Jerabos were illegal miners and shrewd businessmen who wrecked havoc on the Copperbelt and were untouchable by the Police.

People on the Copperbelt are of the view that the "success" of the Jerabos could be the motivating factor behind the mushrooming of gangs in Kitwe.

On the Copperbelt where money is hard to go buy as compared to Lusaka, being "Umupondo" (a thug) is considered the normal thing to do.

They call it hustling and these boys think being a thug, brutalising and stealing from people is normal. 

But another view is that recreational centers are slowly diminishing in various residential areas in Kitwe.

Where play parks used to be, today you will find houses, bars or car parks some of which were "legally" sanctioned by the Kitwe City Council. 

These are places where children in the past years spent their free time playing, but today these places are out of bounds to children.

These kids have nowhere to spend their free time from.

This is what some people think is the reason behind the spread of these gangs.

Sons Of the Devil 

The latest wave of teenage gangs in Kitwe can be traced back to 2015 when the Sons Of the Devil (SOD) gang started beating people in Bulangililo, Kamitondo and Kapoto areas.

In that year, over a dozen of SOD members were arrested and tried in court.

But because most of them were Primary and Junior Secondary School pupils, they were convicted and given suspended sentences.

Two years later, this criminal gang is back.

A number of its members have been nabbed and they are appearing before various courts on various charges.

Some of its senior leaders are being tried in the Kitwe High Court.

Radio Icengelo Senior Presenter Kunda Kunda, who has over the years reported extensively on criminal gangs, fail victim to the SOD gang when six of them beat him up last year.

Mr Kunda spent three months in hospital, recovering from the attack.

“I was walking with my wife and daughter from a funeral when I was attacked in November last year. Six SOD members attacked me, they beat me and left me for dead. Lucky enough I survived and in hospital, I had 12 stitches on my head,” said Mr Kunda as he showed this blogger the scars on his skull.

Despite what he went through, Mr Kunda still hosts live phone-in programs to discuss criminal gangs.

Tokota Boys 

The Tokota Boys gang is the most brutal, popular and most feared of them all.

The gang operates from Ndeke, Mulenga and other surrounding areas and sometimes straying into other gang members' “territory.”

Mayweather's profile on Facebook
Residents of Kitwe West, particularly in Kamakonde, have also reported that Tokota members occasionally harass workers at the health center to demand for condoms.

"We now knock off early from work for fear of these Tokota Boys and SOD who harass us for condoms, its too much," said one health worker.

And in Kalulushi, graffiti can be seen on walls where words like “Team Tokota” or “Tok Tok” have been written to confirm the presence of these boys.

The Tokota Boys has over a hundred members and seems well organized than others.

Its strength was confirmed on New Year’s Eve last year at the Mukuba Mall when its members clobbered SOD Gang members during the New Year countdown.

Bottles flew all over and patrons scampered in all directions as the two notorious gangs clashed.

Three weeks ago, a video showing the Tokota Boys brutally assaulting a 16 year old boy of Mulenga Compound went viral on social media.

The four minutes and 30 seconds video showed a helpless boy being beaten with a huge stick, stones and slaps.

A teenager wearing a head sock repeatedly beat and stoned the boy and later undressed him.

In the video, the helpless boy was seen defecating and later eating his own faeces.
 
As all this was happening, over 10 other Tokota Boys were watching and laughing at the torture.

As this was going on, Tokota Boys members kept singing “Walitwishiba Ifwe……. Tuli ba Tokota…….”

It was later learnt this song was done by a Kitwe-based rap group called 408 Empire whose music video for the song “Walitwishiba Ifwe” was released recently and uploaded on YouTube in March 2018. 

The song is now said to be the "anthem" for the gang.
Members of the 408 Empire music group

Interestingly, a number of Tokota Boys were featured in this music video and names of their “Commanders” like English Tolo (Wisdom Chilekwa) and one of their top leaders Nigga Lu (Boniface Lubansa) are all mentioned in the music video.

Actually, Nigga Lu is shown in the first few seconds of the video, seated with another gang member.

Some of these Tokota Boys “Commanders” have since been arrested by Police.

They are part of 20 suspected Tokota Boys rounded up over the past 10 days in an effort to stop the criminal gangs from getting out of hand.

19 of the suspects appeared at the Kitwe Magistrates' Court on 16 May, charged with grievous harm, abduction or kidnapping and unlawful wounding and poisoning.

Appearing before Kitwe Chief Resident Magistrate Yvonne Nalomba, the 19 identified themselves as pupils, shopkeepers and businessmen of Kitwe, Mufulira and Ndola.

Their ages ranged from 13 to 34 but most of them are 20 year olds. 

The three cases they are facing are only triable in the High Court and the Tokota Boys have been remanded at the Kamfinsa Correctional Facility (Prison) as they wait for the Director of Public Prosecutions to issue instructions to commit them to the Kitwe High Court.


The youngest of the Tokota Boys (whose names cant be revealed for ethical reasons), faces a separate charge of assaulting someone.

After appearing for the three charges he is jointly charged with 18 other Tokota Boys, the teenager remained alone to take plea for the assault case in which he pleaded not guilty.

The case was adjourned to a later date for trial.

Meanwhile, Police have instituted investigations into the "Walitwishiba Ifwe" music video especially that its lyrics supported the Tokota Boys and described some of their criminal acts.
Mayweather wearing a shirt 
written "Team Tokota"

“This music video borders on national security and 408 Empire is inciting the public to commit crimes. How do musicians sing how Tokota Boys cut off people’s heads in Chimwemwe, that’s criminal,” said Copperbelt Police Commissioner Charity Katanga in an interview.

But one prominent Tokota Boy who was seen assaulting the teenager in the video is still at large.

Copperbelt Police Chief Charity Katanga says Mwamba Siame, who is popularly known in the gang as "Mayweather," has evaded capture by the Police for close to three weeks now.

A Police officer named Mudenda who is suspected to have aided the gang leader's escape has been arrested and is in Police custody, awaiting court appearance.

In a Facebook posting a few days ago from his hiding place, Mayweather apologized to his mother for his “sin.”

However, his apology did not go well with his friends who insulted and described him as a coward.

There has been speculation that the leadership of the Tokota Boys had changed hands from Nigga Lu to Mayweather.

With the incarceration of Nigga Lu, it is not clear if Mayweather still calls the shorts in the gang from his hiding place.

According to gang members' testimony in court, Mayweather is a businessman who quarries stones in Mindolo area and employs many of the gang members to dig precious stones for him from disused pits..

In the past three weeks, Police officers have raided various places to "smoke out" the young man but those efforts have proved fruitless.

In one raid on a house in Kwacha Township, Police officers from Riverside Police Station ended up finding 50 rolls of cannabis in a suspected hiding place for Mayweather and picked up 28 year old Bright Tom Kafula who is popularly known as Kamasu.
Mayweather's apology to his mum on Facebook

Police suspect Kamasu to be a close friend of Mayweather who also supplies drugs to all criminal gangs in Kitwe.

He has been charged with trafficking in psychotropic substances and is expected to appear in court this week.

When this blogger used all efforts to enter the "not-so-safe" Mulenga Compound to locate the 16 year old victim of the Tokota Boys, the teenager called for justice in his case.

“Those people aimed at killing me. They did all that because they wanted to kill me. It is just by the will of God that am alive today,” said the boy who is a Grade nine pupil.

When asked whether the Tokota Boys beat him because he belongs to a rival group called The Hundreds or Ba Zale, the teenager refused saying he was beaten for demanding to be paid his salary for the piece work he does in Chamboli Compound where he molds bricks.

But in the video, one of the Tokota Boys was heard describing the teenager as a spy who killed people and deserves to go to jail.

As "Mayweather" continued beating the teenager in the video, he kept asking him if he belongs to Ba Zale.

On Facebook, most members of the Tokota Boys Gang have adopted the word "Tokota" at the end of their names to show their membership.

Under cover investigations in Ndeke compound have revealed that pupils in this area are now moving with bags on their back throughout the day to avoid being beaten by the gang.

Parents have revealed that Tokota Boys members always move with bags on their back and any teenager walking the streets without a bag is seen as an enemy, a target for assault and possibly a member of a rival gang.

This has sent shivers in the community and children who are not even aligned to this gang are now moving with bags as a precaution for their own safety.

90 Niggas 

In Buchi and Bulangililo Compounds, another teenage gang has sprung up and it is called the 90 Niggas Gang.

This one is composed of mostly teenagers from the age of 13 and the oldest is 18 years old.

13 of these boys were rounded up last month and charged for idle and disorderly conduct.

Since last month, the 13 ‘Niggas” have been appearing before Kitwe Magistrate Leonard Tembo and the case has now reached trial stage.

When they appeared for plea, all the boys pleaded not guilty.

They immediately applied for bail because most of them are in Grades Seven and Nine and are expected to write examinations at the end of the year.

Magistrate Tembo granted them K5,000 bail with two working surities each.

In a separate case, three suspected members of the 90 Niggas Gang appeared before Magistrate Tembo on 18 May on two counts of assaulting a neighbourhood watch officer of Mulenga Compound.

The three, 23 year old Martin Nkonde, 24 year old Fred Chipaila and 27 year old Martin Kafula where jointly charged on two counts of assaulting Richard Chitembo.

Magistrate Tembo sentenced Mr Nkonde to five years imprisonment with hard labour after he pleaded guilty to the first count but pleaded not guilty to the second charge.

His co-accused Mr Chipaila and Mr Kafula pleaded not guilty to both counts of assault and their matter was adjourned to June 4th, 2018 for commencement of trial.


70 Niggas

This is seemingly an offshoot of the Tokota Boys who have taken the Mine Township in Kalulushi as their home base.

I suspect they are related to the Tokota Boys because in some areas where the gang has left its graffiti, even the name Tokota Boys is written.

It is also possible that the criminal activities of the Tokota Boys may have inspired youths in Kalulushi to start their own gang.

According to people who have been assaulted by this gang, the group consists of about 10 members and usually attacks its victims between 19:00 and 22:00hrs in the night.

"They use pangas and golf sticks to hit their victims. On the day i was attacked, about 10 men stopped me on my way home and they demanded that i give them everything i had in the pockets, before i could respond, gthey hit me on the heard and i fainted," said a 15 year old Grade nine pupil who asked not to be named.

This gang is so proud of its existence in Mine Township.

A long a number of streets, they have written their name "70 Niggas" on many wall fences to intimidate residents.

These writings go hand in hand with writings such as "Take Off" whose meaning is yet to be known.

So far, a number of victims have been hacked and beaten but no arrests have been made.

It is still a mystery as to who is in this gang and who leads it.

The Hundreds

Another gang which is gaining prominence is The Hundred which is commonly known as Ba Zale.

This one is said to be based in Chamboli, Luangwa and Wusakile areas of Kitwe where it “rules” the night.

Last week, the group released a video in which it was torturing an alleged member of the Tokota Boys gang in revenge against the assault on the 16 year old teenager of Mulenga Compound.

In the video, a middle aged man is seen crying as he holds his clothes in his hands.

Just like in the Tokota video, the Zale members also undressed their victim and forced him to insult Tokota “Commanders.”

Nine gang members took part in the assault and seven have since been arrested by Police for assault occasioning bodily harm.

On 18 May, one of those arrested Elijah Sikazwe appeared in court.

He pleaded guilty to one count of assault and he confessed having assaulted Richard Chitembo who he suspected of being a member of the rival Tokota Boys gang.

Magistrate Leonard Tembo sentenced him to five years with hard labour. 

During the proceedings, State Prosecutor Sarah Mvula told the court that upon his apprehension, Elijah told officers at Wusakile Police Station that he was indeed a member of The Hundreds gang.


On Saturday, seven more members of The Hundreds gang were arrested by Police and they appeared in court this morning.

Two of them pleaded guilty to assault and they will be sentenced tomorrow.

Other Gangs

Other gangs operating in Kitwe are Buchi Boys, Boko Haram and Mbwambwambwa which is based in Musonda Compound.

These are little known and their activities have not yet reached the ears of the law enforcement agencies.

Public Reaction

The reaction to the arrest of the gang members has been overwelming.

On 16th May when the Tokota Boys appeared at the Kitwe Magistrates' Court, thousands of Kitwe residents lined the streets to catch a glimpse of the boys who have been terrorising the town.

As the Police truck (popularly known as Kasalanga) carrying the suspects made its way through the Central Business District of Kitwe, people danced and sung songs of joy to see their tormentors being brought to justice.

"Fipayeni fye ifyo (Just kill them,)," shouted one of the residents as four Police pick-ups carrying heavily armed Police officers escorted the Tokota Boys to court.

Two days earlier, President Edgar Lungu directed the Zambia Police Service to ensure that the gangs are crushed.

This presidential directive led to the creation of a Security Taskforce which has led to many arrests and subsequent prosecutions.

Police Chiefs have also held several meetings with community leaders to help identify gang members in an effort to rid these communities of insecurity.

Inspector General of Police Kakoma Kanganja even visited the city and led a pre-dawn operation to arrest people loitering at night in compounds.

In several areas where these gangs operate from, a night time curfew which is locally known as "shishita" has been imposed.

The curfew forbids anyone to walk around in the areas between 22:00hrs and 06:00hrs in the morning.

And Macky 2, arguably Zambia's leading rapper, has reacted to the mushrooming of gangs in Kitwe. 

The rapper, whose real names are Mulaza Kaira, hails from the Copperbelt and knows what is happening.

Below is what he posted on his Facebook page:
Macky 2


"TOKOTA or DOKOTA?

There's something wrong with our society today and if we don't address this now we are heading into a very dangerous future.

Where's happened to the society that produced doctors? Who is to blame when society begins to produce TOKOTA boys and not DOKOTA boys to save lives?

It is easy to look at the TOKOTA boys with disdain but we should be brave enough to look at the community where these boys are coming from. 

Most of these boys are coming from broken homes and in most cases they grew up knowing hate and violence as a way to survive. 

These kids are coming from a society where education is never celebrated. 

A society where thuggery is the key to success. These boys are a fruits of a broken society.... 

Change Begins With Us."