A brutal stabbing incident in Cape Flats has once again highlighted the deadly impact of gang violence on public services, after paramedics were forced to delay their response while waiting for an armed police escort.
The emergency crew was responding to a critically injured stabbing victim, but due to the areaβs high-risk status β plagued by ongoing gang activity, frequent shootings, and violent crime β they could not immediately enter the scene without law enforcement backup.
βWe canβt risk our crewsβ lives,β said a senior official from the emergency medical services. βThese are not isolated incidents β gang territories have turned emergency zones into war zones.β
According to sources on the ground, the victim was eventually stabilized and transported to hospital, but the delay could have cost precious minutes in a life-threatening situation.
The Cape Flats region, long burdened by systemic inequality and crime, has become increasingly dangerous for frontline workers, with paramedics, police officers, and even firefighters often targeted, threatened, or caught in the crossfire.
Health unions and civil society groups are now calling for urgent interventions to protect healthcare workers in gang-affected areas, warning that fear and delays are compromising lives.
βNo one should have to fear being killed while trying to save someone else,β one paramedic said anonymously. βWe took an oath to serve, but weβre not bulletproof.β
Government officials have acknowledged the crisis, with the Western Cape Department of Health urging greater SAPS support, increased patrols, and long-term anti-gang strategies.
As another family prays for the survival of a loved one, the incident paints a grim picture of how violence doesnβt just take lives β it prevents others from saving them.