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Zimbabweans
in South Africa flee attacks
Robyn
Dixon, Los Angeles Times
May 14, 2008
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-zimbabweans14-2008may14,0,2598641.story
Two people are killed
amid resentment over the presence of foreigners willing to work
for little money.
Isaac Moyo left
Zimbabwe for South Africa six years ago because it was so hard to
survive in his homeland. But after a mob armed with machetes and
axes chopped through his door in this township Monday and chased
him away, Moyo feels that he has no choice but to go back to Zimbabwe.
Moyo and hundreds of
Zimbabweans and other foreigners fled their homes in Alexandra,
a teeming crime-ridden township, on Sunday and Monday to escape
xenophobic attacks. Some hid in the nearby bush or in police compounds.
"They were saying,
'Go back to Zimbabwe, we don't want to see you here, you're taking
our jobs,' " Moyo said Tuesday. "They said, 'Go back to
[Zimbabwean President Robert] Mugabe.' They took everything, saying,
'You didn't get this from Mugabe; this is our property.' "
More than 100 foreigners
were injured and at least one foreigner and a South African were
killed during two nights of violence.
The attacks increase
pressure on South African President Thabo Mbeki over his policy
of "quiet diplomacy." His administration has avoided direct
criticism of human rights abuses by Mugabe's government, even as
hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans have flooded into South Africa
to escape the economic meltdown and political violence at home.
The presence of Zimbabweans
willing to work for as little as $6 a day has sparked resentment
among poor in a nation with more than 40% unemployment.
Moyo, 30, and three brothers
were living in a shack in Alexandra until Monday night, sending
money home to their family in Zimbabwe.
On Sunday night, they
had to flee attacks and sleep in the bush. On Monday evening, as
he was cooking dinner, Moyo heard loud singing in the street. He
knew the mob was back.
"People were singing
and celebrating and were chasing foreigners back to Zimbabwe,"
he said. "They started beating us."
His brother David was
hit on the head with a large stick; the wound required six stitches.
Moyo does not know where his other two brothers have gone; he and
David had their cellphones stolen and cannot call them.
He said the anger toward
Zimbabweans had been building in Alexandra for months.
Moyo, a qualified mechanic
in Zimbabwe, initially earned about $6 a day as a bricklayer's laborer
but now gets $13 a day as a painter. Many South African township
dwellers resent some Zimbabweans' better job qualifications and
their willingness to work for little money.
Jimmy Matsena, 36, a
South African security guard who lives in Alexandra, said he was
sickened when he saw a crowd chase a man who was carrying a few
blankets and other belongings.
"This xenophobia,
it's bad," he said. "People were shouting, 'Mambe! Mambe!
-- catch them, catch them, they don't belong here!' "
"People feel angry
with Zimbabweans," Matsena said. "People get jealous because
they see these people progressing. Zimbabweans are good at crafts
and they all speak perfect English."
He said some township
dwellers who believe that Mugabe is a cruel leader say it is because
of something innately cruel in Zimbabwe's society. They tend to
blame South Africa's high crime rate on the influx of Zimbabweans.
The violence this week
follows a series of violent attacks on Somalis in the last few years,
mainly around Cape Town.
"Such acts can only
take society backwards and open the wounds of racism and intolerance
against which so many of our people fought," said Tiyani Rikhotso,
a spokesman for the ruling African National Congress party.
robyn.dixon@latimes.com
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