• About Us
  • Who Are We
  • Work With Us
Thursday, March 23, 2023
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
The Globe Post
39 °f
New York
44 ° Fri
46 ° Sat
40 ° Sun
41 ° Mon
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

South Africa Vows Crackdown on Xenophobic Attacks After Five Die

Staff Writer by Staff Writer
09/03/19
in Featured, World
South African burning tires in protests that led to xenophobic violence

By 2008, it was clear that South African authorities had little interest in addressing the presence of xenophobia in society. Photo: AFP

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Five people have been killed in xenophobic violence in South Africa, police said on Tuesday, as President Cyril Ramaphosa vowed to clamp down on the attacks and the African Union and Nigeria sounded their alarm.

Scores of people – some armed with axes and machetes – gathered in Johannesburg’s central business district (CBD) for a third day of unrest directed against foreigners, hours after mobs burned and looted shops in the township of Alexandra, prompting police to fire rubber bullets to disperse them.

Five deaths – most of them South Africans – have been reported, police said, adding that 189 people had been arrested.

In a video address diffused on Twitter, Ramaphosa said attacks on businesses run by “foreign nationals is something totally unacceptable, something that we cannot allow to happen in South Africa.”

“I want it to stop immediately,” said Ramaphosa, adding that the violence had “no justification.”

Sporadic violence against foreign-owned stores and enterprises has a long history in South Africa, where many locals blame immigrants for high unemployment, particularly in manual labor.

The country is a major destination for economic migrants from neighboring Lesotho, Mozambique and Zimbabwe. Others come from much further away, including South Asia and Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country.

But this week’s assaults seem to have been on a greater scale than in the past, although the full details remain unknown.

“They burned everything,” Bangladeshi shop owner Kamrul Hasan, 27, told AFP in Alexandra, adding that his shop gets attacked every three to six months.

“All my money is gone. If the (South African) government pays for my plane ticket, I will go back to Bangladesh,” he said.

Alexandra, one of the poorest urban areas in South Africa, is situated just five kilometers (three miles) from Sandton, the city’s gleaming business and shopping district.

More than 90 people were arrested on Monday in connection with the violence and looting of shops in Johannesburg and surrounding areas, the government said.

Similar incidents occurred in the capital Pretoria on Monday, when local media reported shacks and shops burning in the Marabastad – a central business area largely populated by economic migrants.

Ubuntu

Nigeria summoned its South African ambassador to express “displeasure over the treatment of her citizens” and dispatched a special envoy, who is expected to arrive later this week.

Several Nigerians used social media to call for a boycott of South African companies, including telecoms provider MTN, satellite television service DSTV and retailer Shoprite.

The recent attacks in South Africa are condemnable. It is sad and very unfortunate that the lives and livelihoods of Nigerians living in South Africa, are once again being destroyed with such wantonness carelessness and recklessness. pic.twitter.com/vm5f1u341y

— Prof Yemi Osinbajo (@ProfOsinbajo) September 3, 2019

Separately, African Union chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat condemned the violence “in the strongest terms” but said he was encouraged “by arrests already made by the South African authorities.”

The attacks on foreign stores began a day after South African truckers started a nationwide strike to protest against the employment of foreign drivers.

On Monday, they blocked roads and torched foreign-driven vehicles in parts of the country.

At least another 20 people were arrested in connection with those attacks in the southeastern province of KwaZulu-Natal.

Deputy President David Mabuza condemned all attacks on foreign nationals.

“We are a nation founded on the values of ubuntu (humanity) as espoused by our founding father, President Nelson Mandela … we should always resist the temptation of being overwhelmed by hatred,” he said at a meeting with ministers in Cape Town on Tuesday.

Sickly Economy 

The violence erupted ahead of a meeting of the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, where hundreds of political and business leaders will gather for three days from Wednesday.

David Makhura, the premier of Johannesburg’s Gauteng province, said rioting was not a solution.

“This issue can be dealt with without resorting to xenophobia,” Makhura told reporters. “There is no country that does not have foreign nationals”.

Opposition parties pinned the blame on the ruling African National Congress (ANC).

“South Africans are scared and lack real hope for the future,” said Mmusi Maimane, leader of the Democratic Alliance, South Africa’s official opposition. “We are seeing economic and social collapse in action.”

Ramaphosa took office after elections in May that he won on a platform of reviving the country’s economy and boost employment.

But in July, the national statistics office said joblessness had reached 29 percent – the highest since the country’s quarterly labor force survey was introduced 11 years earlier.


More on the Subject 

HRW Calls for Arrests in South Africa After Attacks on Foreigners

ShareTweet
Staff Writer

Staff Writer

AFP with The Globe Post

Related Posts

People carry their belonging on their heads while they walk on a flooded road following heavy rain downpour in Wawa in Ogun State southwest Nigeria
World

Deadly Floods Kill 50 in Northern Nigeria

by Staff Writer
August 17, 2022
Nigerian protesters blocking the Lagos-Ibadan expressway.
World

Unrest in Nigerian City After Deadly Shooting of Protesters

by Staff Writer
October 21, 2020
A soldier patrols by a Central African church
Featured

Attacks on Religious Leaders in West and Central Africa Must Be Addressed

by Tony Perkins and Fred Davie
October 26, 2021
Fearing Attacks, Asylum-Seekers Storm UN Office in S.Africa
Featured

Fearing Attacks, Asylum-Seekers Storm UN Office in S.Africa

by Staff Writer
November 14, 2019
The Toxic Cocktail That Fuels South Africa’s Xenophobia
Featured

The Toxic Cocktail That Fuels South Africa’s Xenophobia

by Staff Writer
October 3, 2019
South African burning tires in protests that led to xenophobic violence
Featured

1,500 Flee Homes in South Africa Amid Xenophobic Violence: UN

by Staff Writer
September 20, 2019
Next Post
Boris Johnson

UK's Johnson Defeated in Key Brexit Vote, Setting Up Potential Election

There’s a Sociopath in the White House

There's a Sociopath in the White House

Recommended

Transgender Army veteran Tanya Walker speaks to protesters in Times Square near a military recruitment centre

Tennessee Is A Drag on the First Amendment

March 21, 2023
participants of an artificial intelligence conference

How AI Could Upend the World Even More Than Electricity or the Internet

March 19, 2023
Chinese President Xi Jinping

China’s Path to Economic Dominance

March 15, 2023
Heavily armed police inspect the area near a Jehovah's Witness church where several people have been killed in a shooting in Hamburg, northern Germany

Eight Dead in Shooting at Jehovah’s Witness Hall in Germany

March 10, 2023
Myanmar Rohingya refugees look on in a refugee camp in Teknaf, in Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar, on November 26, 2016

US Announces $26M in New Aid for Rohingya

March 8, 2023
A flooded road in Batu Berendam in Malaysia's southern coastal state of Malacca

At Least Four Dead, Tens of Thousands Evacuated in Malaysia Floods

March 6, 2023

Opinion

Transgender Army veteran Tanya Walker speaks to protesters in Times Square near a military recruitment centre

Tennessee Is A Drag on the First Amendment

March 21, 2023
Chinese President Xi Jinping

China’s Path to Economic Dominance

March 15, 2023
An earthquake survivor reacts as rescuers look for victims and other survivors in Hatay, a Turkish province where hundreds of buildings were destroyed by the earthquake

Heed the Call of Our Broken World

March 1, 2023
Top view of the US House of Representatives

‘Cringy Awards:’ Who Is the Most Embarrassing US House Representative?

February 13, 2023
Protesters rally against the fatal police assault of Tyre Nichols, outside of the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center in Detroit, Michigan, on January 27, 2023

How Do Violent ‘Monsters’ Take Root?

February 3, 2023
George Santos from the 3rd Congressional district of New York

George Santos for Speaker!

January 16, 2023
Facebook Twitter

Newsletter

Do you like our reporting?
SUBSCRIBE

About Us

The Globe Post

The Globe Post is part of Globe Post Media, a U.S. digital news organization that is publishing the world's best targeted news sites.

submit oped

© 2018 The Globe Post

No Result
View All Result
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Interviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Democracy at Risk
    • Media Freedom
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Book Reviews
    • Stage
  • Submit Op-ed

© 2018 The Globe Post