Bombing cash machines

Bombing cash machines

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Hours before dawn on the last day of 2006, a grey van pulled up to the ATM housed in a steel shed just outside T.P.T. Supermarket in the run-down township of Olievenhoutbosch in South Africa.

The store's security guard, posted about 30 feet away, said he saw four hooded men jump out of the van, stuff something into the front of the cash machine, then run away.

The blast that followed was so strong it jolted people awake in nearby homes, witnesses said. But before anyone could alert the police, the hooded men rushed back and pulled from the smouldering remains a box the size of a small file cabinet. Together they hoisted it into the van and sped off.

And so ended the 53rd and final cash machine bombing of 2006, the year a toxic stew of joblessness, criminal ingenuity and readily available mine explosives gave rise to a startling new trend in crime-weary South Africa.

"Eeesh," said T.P.T. Supermarket's night guard, Alpheus Nevhundogwa, 49, as he recalled the attack. "These people, dangerous."

Global appeal

With their allure of easy cash, ATMs have long been a target for criminals worldwide, industry officials say. One popular tactic is to ram a truck into a cash machine so it can be dislodged, loaded onto the truck and driven away.

Criminals in Europe have destroyed machines by injecting compressed gas into them until they explode. A Japanese gang once used a backhoe to steal an ATM from a railroad station. When the machine's remains were found nearly 48km away, $400,000 (Dh1,469,348) was gone.

But blowing up cash machines, especially as often as it has been done here in recent months, is a peculiarly South African crime, say industry officials and security experts, who attribute it to the unusual juxtaposition of First World banking conveniences and the kind of desperate poverty rarely found in developed countries.

In few places in the world, global analyses show, is income distributed so unequally.

The attacks on ATMs in South Africa have grown in tandem with a politically driven push to install more machines in downtrodden areas where, under apartheid, modern banking was almost unknown.

Common phenomenon

There are now 15,000 ATMs in the country, and the free-standing, steel-shed variety, such as the one blown up in Olievenhoutbosch on December 31, are both increasingly common and especially vulnerable to explosives. No injuries or deaths have resulted, police say.

Blowing up an ATM is relatively easy in a country where a vast mining industry offers an endless supply of powerful explosives to steal. Both putty and sticks of dynamite have been used in attacks, though getting the amount and positioning right has proved elusive; most ATM bombings, police and security experts say, fail because the blast is either too weak to break loose the safe inside or so strong that the bills are ripped to shreds.

"They relatively seldom get their hands on the money," said Ian Janse van Vuuren of the South African Banking Risk Information Centre, a nonprofit group that advises the industry on security issues. "They're still in the experimental phase."

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