Criminals are getting smarter by the day by joining forces with those across our borders to make even bigger sales. Some of the cars stolen or hijacked around Gauteng, Mpumalanga, Limpopo, and Kwa-Zulu-Natal are cleverly smuggled into our neighbouring countries.
Let’s see which of the 6 countries we border South African cars go to and how you can protect yours.
The first five kilometers of a solid concrete fence along the borders of the Umkhayakude village in northern Kwa-Zulu-Natal and Mozambique is currently underway; however, despite that, criminals are now building makeshift steel bridges that they can use to drive the stolen vehicles over the fence.
The Limpopo River is 1.6 kilometers long and runs through three other countries. Zimbabwe, Botswana, and Mozambique. At low tide, high-powered stolen vehicles are driven across the river to be sold. It is also said that locals with donkeys are paid a small fee to drag the cars across the river.
Vehicles stolen in the northern cape are trafficked through the Vioolsdrift crossing into Namibia. Two months ago, a man driving a suspected stolen vehicle, headed towards the Namibia border was arrested, the vehicle was valued at R1.1 million, and found inside the vehicle was R9500 worth of unprocessed gold.
The Sikwane border located in the North West, is used to smuggle vehicles into Botswana. It is believed that Botswana is used as a transit to smuggle stolen vehicles into Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Once in Botswana, the vehicles are fitted with false Zambia registrations under the pretext that they are returning to Zambia.
Zambia is the link to all other African countries as it shares its borders with eight different countries; Zimbabwe, Botswana, Malawi, Namibia, Tanzania, Angola, Mozambique, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
This makes it the main attraction for syndicates to traffic stolen vehicles in large quantities to different parts of the continent. When vehicles are stolen from South Africa to neighboring countries, the vehicle registrations are changed so they can “quietly” cross over to Zambia.

Big cars such as 4x4s and SUVs can withstand the strain caused while crossing the border and are strong enough to be driven through sharp fences, bumpy roads, waters, and mountains. They are also in demand in war-ridden countries or countries without proper road infrastructure.
There’s no guarantee that thieves won’t try with your car, no matter the make or model, so the only thing you can do is to put in some protective measures to make it harder for them and hopefully chase them away. Here are some of the best vehicle anti-theft devices:

Here’s how Cartrack Botswana will ease your mind and give your vehicle an extra layer of protection:
Cartrack has an over 90% recovery rate and is trusted by over 2 million subscribers worldwide. We are the leading force in stolen vehicle recovery, so contact us today
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