| |
Back to Index
Twelve
dead in anti-foreigner attacks on Zimbabweans
Celean
Jacobson, The Independent (UK)
May
19, 2008
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/twelve-dead-in-antiforeigner-attacks-on-zimbabweans-830656.html
Emmerson Ziso fled hunger
and repression in neighboring Zimbabwe, but now he wants to go back.
Even his violent, chaotic homeland seems a haven compared with Johannesburg,
where weekend attacks on foreigners left at least 12 dead. "Most
of the Zimbabweans want to leave. It is better at home than here,"
said the former teacher who was chased out of his home by a mob
yesterday morning. "It's spreading like wildfire and the police
and the army can't control it," Ziso said, as he tried to help
register about 500 people who sought refuge at the police station
in Johannesburg's Cleveland area. It was a scene repeated in other
poor suburbs around the city. Angry residents accused foreigners
- many of them Zimbabweans who had fled their own country's economic
collapse - of taking scarce jobs and housing. President Thabo Mbeki
said yesterday that he would set up a panel of experts to investigate.
African National Congress President Jacob Zuma, who is likely to
succeed Mbeki next year, condemned the attacks. "We cannot
allow South Africa to be famous for xenophobia," Zuma told
a conference in Pretoria. The weekend attacks come as the government
tries to change South Africa's violent image ahead of the 2010 World
Cup. South Africa has one of the highest crime rates in the world,
recording an average of 50 murders each day.
Many in the
ANC government took refuge in neighboring countries during apartheid
and are deeply embarrassed by the current violence, which has targeted
immigrants who came to South Africa from other nations in the region.
Police spokesman Govindsamy Mariemuthoo said 12 people were killed.
He said 200 people had been arrested on charges ranging from rape
to robbery and public violence. The Red Cross said at least 3,000
people were left destitute. Police said the worst violence erupted
after midnight Saturday in Cleveland and other run-down inner city
areas that are home to many immigrants. Two of the victims were
burned and three others beaten to death. More than 50 were taken
to hospitals with gunshot and stab wounds. The situation remained
tense along the main street through Cleveland and police had to
use tear gas to disperse stick-wielding crowds trying to loot shops.
Photographs supplied by local newspapers captured horrific images
of a man who was set on fire after a tire soaked in gasoline was
put around his neck. There was no immediate word on his condition.
One of the demonstrators
in Cleveland, Michael Khondwane, said foreigners were to blame for
South Africa's drug and crime scourge. He said the violence would
send them "the message that they must go." Johannesburg
is South Africa's economic hub and home to hundreds of thousands
of immigrants. Many of them are illegal, but many have also been
here for more than a decade and possess South African identity documents.
There has been sporadic anti-foreigner violence for months, mainly
aimed at stores run by Somalis accused of undercutting local storeowners,
but nothing that compares to the violence over the weekend. Eric
Goemaere, the head of Medecins Sans Frontieres in South Africa,
said his staff was helping to treat people with bullet wounds and
back injuries from being thrown out of windows. He called on the
South African government to declare Zimbabweans as refugees and
give them proper protection. "It's a crisis," he said.
There are believed to
be up to 3 million Zimbabweans living in neighboring South Africa
who have fled the economic and political turmoil in their homeland.
Massive inflation, food and fuel shortages have sent increasing
numbers of Zimbabweans to South Africa, Zambia, Botswana, Mozambique
and Namibia in search of business and basic commodities - or whole
new lives. Zimbabwe's opposition also has cited mounting violence
and intimidation targeting its supporters since the country's disputed
March 29 presidential election. A runoff between longtime ruler
Robert Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai is set for
June 27. At the downtown Jeppe police station, large tents and water
tanks were being offloaded to help another group of 500 people who
sought shelter. Dazed-looking women sat huddled close to piles of
blankets and clothes while men kept watch over fridges, bicycles,
TVs and other belongings. Mozambican Bevinda Komati's family including
her 11-year-old niece and a 1-month-old baby had to be rescued by
police when a mob attacked her brother's small store in downtown
Johannesburg. "We had to hide in the back. They were breaking
windows and throwing stones. We didn't know what to do. Luckily,
the police came and saved us." The 26-year-old has been living
in South Africa since 1988. Her niece was born here. "We have
lived with these people every day. I don't know why they are doing
this," she said.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|