Gang violence leads to hundreds of homicides a year in South Africa, especially in the poor neighborhoods known as the Cape Flats on the outskirts of South Africa's top tourist city of Cape Town.
Authorities estimate there are around 30,000 illegal miners operating in some of South Africa's 6,000 disused gold and other mines. The mining gangs are often armed and violent in protecting their territory and are controlled by criminal syndicates, authorities say.
Ramaphosa said gang violence and illegal mining are the two organized crimes that most threaten South Africa's democracy and economic development.
Police, who will be in charge of the soldiers during the law enforcement deployment, say they have four key operational objectives: reduce crime in designated problem areas, arrest offenders, recover illegal firearms and explosives, and confiscate narcotics.
This is not the first time South Africa has used the army to fight crime, though it is the longest deployment in recent years. In 2023, Ramaphosa deployed more than 3,000 soldiers for a month to certain crime hot spots.