Although PAGAD's leadership denied involvement, PAGAD's G-Force, operating in small
cells, was believed responsible for killing a large number of gang leaders, and also for a bout of urban
terrorism—particularly bombings—in Cape Town. The bombings started in 1998, and included nine bombings in 2000. In addition to targeting gang leaders, bombing targets included South African authorities,
synagogues,
gay nightclubs, tourist attractions, and Western-associated restaurants. The most prominent attack during this time was the bombing on 25 August 1998 of the Cape Town
Planet Hollywood which resulted in two deaths and 26 injuries. PAGAD's leaders have become known for making
antisemitic statements. A 1997 incendiary bomb attack on a
Jewish bookshop owner was found by police to have been committed with the same material PAGAD has used in other attacks. In 1998,
Ebrahim Moosa, a University of Cape Town academic who had been critical of PAGAD, decided to take a post in the United States after his home was bombed. Violent acts such as bombings in Cape Town subsided in 2002, and the police have not attributed any such acts to PAGAD since the November 2002 bombing of the
Bishop Lavis offices of the Serious Crimes Unit in the
Western Cape. In 2002, PAGAD leader
Abdus Salaam Ebrahim was convicted of public violence and imprisoned for seven years. Although a number of other PAGAD members were arrested and convicted of related crimes, none were convicted of the Cape Town bombings. ==Current activities==