Road Safety Blog

Policemen are under severe stress and need counseling

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The SA Depression Anxiety Group (Saga) warned on Wednesday that policemen under severe stress needed counselling to prevent them from becoming “trigger-happy”.

“What we need to be looking at, [is] training police, empowering the police to recognise their own stresses, empowering them to be psychologically and mentally healthy so that they don’t take anger and frustration out on the people on the streets or become trigger happy,” Saga councillor Janine Shamos told SABC radio.

She said policemen and women were experiencing “huge stress levels in terms of the way they are perceived by the population”.

The public’s distrust of police officers, coupled with the highly stressful conditions under which they were working and their low salaries, created difficult working conditions for them.

“We are seeing that the police do not have the support from the top people in their stations in terms of their psychological well-being,” said Shamos.

“Instead of having a forum where they are… encouraged to come forward and say, ‘we are not coping’, they feel they are stigmatised if they come forward for help,” said Shamos.

The stress also sometimes leads to family murders and suicides, she said.

President Jacob Zuma and a delegation of ministers met with 1 000 police station commanders on Tuesday to discuss the problems of their daily lives.

Zuma also expressed support for an amendment to the Criminal Procedure Act, which would give police officers more lenience to shoot criminals who threaten them.

[ Information from SAPA]

The Arrive Alive website has been able to provide asisstance to a publication by the Icfai University Press in Chennai , India. This publication is titled “Counseling for Different Phases of Life”. We would like to encourage all our policemen and women and traffic officers to view the information on:

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