The City of Cape Town has warned vandals and illegal graffiti artists that any defacement of public property would be harshly dealt with.
According to a report issued by the CoCT, the first nine months of this year saw members of the city’s Graffiti Unit remove 18 356 square meters of illegal graffiti in the metropole – 80% of it from City-owned properties.
According to the-law, graffiti constitutes any one of, or a combination of, any inscription, word, figure other than a figure indicating a street number, letter, sign, symbol, sketch, picture, drawing, mural or design that is applied to any natural surface or man-made surface on any property and which is visible to a person from a public place.
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The Graffiti by-law further states that the owner or occupier of a property has the responsibility to ensure that the property remains free of illegal graffiti on any wall, fence, building, or structure.
In a statement the CoCT said that, the Graffiti Unit was working closely with various neighbourhood watches and other enforcement agencies to apprehend suspects that vandalise City of Cape Town property.
It added that complaints received by the unit are investigated and recorded in a register, with each case file containing evidence such as photographs and statements by complainants.
Anyone caught in the act of defacing property will be fined R1500 on the first offence together with a compliance notice to have the graffiti removed at their expense.
Property owners whose buildings have been targeted, are served with a notice to have the graffiti removed within a certain period. Non-compliance will lead to a fine being issued, or the City removing the graffiti at the cost of the owner.
‘Unsanctioned graffiti, and particularly gang insignia or other anti-social sentiments that end up on walls are an eyesore that bring down the tone of an area, said Mayoral Committee Member, JP Smith. “Our Graffiti Unit has been hard at work for years, cleaning up after people who have scant regard for the property of others. But we want to emphasise that there is a space for this type of artistic expression, provided the artists or property owners go through the right channels.”
“Apart from enforcing the Graffiti by-law and cleaning illegal works, the unit also oversees the process where a formal application for mural art is received, by doing site inspections of the locations where the proposed mural will be situated, and who the affected parties and property owners will be.”
“A report is then submitted to the City’s Arts and Culture branch, which is responsible for facilitating applications.”
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Photo: City of Cape Town