Monday, October 28, 2013

Mob kills foreigner suspected of rape

Secunda - A foreigner has been beaten to death by a group of men in Secunda, Mpumalanga police said on Monday.

The 30-year-old Ethiopian was attacked at his place of work on Saturday by a group of men who forced him into a taxi, Brigadier Selvy Mohlala said in a statement.

“The group attacked him with sticks and sjamboks... The men forced him into their kombi and drove with him to the taxi rank in Secunda,” Mohlala said.

They apparently accused the man of raping the six-year-old daughter of one of the men.

“Upon arrival at the taxi rank, they continued to assault the victim until he was unconscious... The victim sustained serious injuries.”

He was taken to hospital and died of his injuries on Sunday. No arrests had been made by Monday afternoon.

- Sapa

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Four die in wave of violence

Cape Town - Two Somali shopkeepers were killed, two robbers shot dead and five others wounded in separate incidents of violence at Gugulethu shops owned by foreigners in the past four days, police confirmed.

On Friday, Somali shopkeepers Abdimuhammad Ali and Ahmad Muse were shot dead after a robbery that took place in their Lucky No2 shop at the Lotus informal settlement.

At another Somali shop in Phola Park - not far from Lotus - two robbers were shot dead.

Police said the robberies took place at about 7.15pm. No arrests had been made.

“A part of the investigation will establish if the suspects can be linked with both robberies and murder incidents,” said police spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Andre Traut.

Lucky No2 owner Abdisalon Dhiblawe said he was uncertain of the events that led to the killing of his shopkeepers on Friday evening.

He said he received a phone call at his home in Bellville at about 9pm from a Somali shop owner telling him his “brothers” had been shot dead.

Dhiblawe said that when he got to the shop the bodies were still there and the shop had been looted.

The robbers took money, airtime and cigarettes before fleeing the scene, he said.

In Phola Park, Somalis said they were shocked and afraid of what would happen next after three consecutive shootings and robberies that took place at the Skoma Cash Store over the weekend.

The first attack occurred on Friday when the shop owner and his staff were shot at by gunmen - one staff member was shot in the stomach and another in the buttocks.

The following day, armed men again attacked the store - this time, one staff member was shot in the arm and another in the chest.

On Sunday, robbers shot and wounded the shopkeeper through the security bars and forced their way through the side door, smashing a refrigerator and taking cash, airtime and cigarettes.

Xasan Maxamalm who was at the scene, said the shopkeeper was serving customers when the gunmen entered the store.

“The two robbers said they wanted to buy a loaf of brown bread, so my brother went to fetch the bread.

“When he put the bread on the counter, they shot him. My brother then ran to our room and my friend came out with a gun and shot back at them,” he said.

The owner of the land on which the shop is situated, Luyanda Mbambane, said: “What’s happening here is bad. During apartheid we were foreigners in other countries, like Somalia, and they treated us well, but now we are treating them badly.

“I for one will protect them until I die. They have been very helpful to this community and the people know that,” he said, crying.

The wounded were all being treated at hospital.

Anyone with information about the incidents, or knows the whereabouts of the suspects, is urged to call the Gugulethu police on 021 684 2300 or 021 684 2324/5, or the Community Service Centre commander at 079 880 9884.

Police get rough with queueing refugees

Cape Town - Dozens of refugees were manhandled by police as they queued in the rain outside Customs House on Monday.

The refugee centre has been plagued by allegations of corruption, violence and congestion.

Refugees say they have been returning every day for weeks trying to renew their expired documents.

Seeking shelter under a nearby bridge, Derrick Kibi - originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo - said he had been queueing since June 13. “I’ve been coming here every day, and this morning I came here at 5am, and I’m still here. What makes me upset is seeing the women and the children standing in the rain.”

Each time officials ushered small groups of people into the building, there would be a sudden dash from the group standing beneath the bridge.

Police stepped in and the Cape Argus watched as officers grabbed people and shoved others aside - a few were pushed so hard they fell to the ground. Last week, police reportedly fired tear gas outside the centre in a similar scenario. Police were called in when security guards struggled to control the crowd.

Some people accused officials of “slowing down processes” to fuel corruption.

Earlier this month, the security chief at the centre was removed from his post while being investigated for accepting bribes.

Refugee rights organisation People Against Suffering Oppression and Poverty (Passop) members spent on Monday observing the commotion.

Passop’s Braam Hanekom said they were monitoring how many people were being turned away without being served, whether their dignity was being infringed upon, and the response from police.

“The situation is not acceptable,” Hanekom said, adding that many of the people in the queue appreciated having the police on-site from a safety perspective.

“But it’s not the job of the police to run the queue,” Hanekom said.

In response, provincial police spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel André Traut said police were stationed at Customs House to monitor the crowd.

“The situation at the Department of Home Affairs is monitored by SAPS to prevent incidents of violence while people are waiting.”

Local management at Customs House was unavailable for comment on Monday.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Xenophobia threatens democracy - Pandor

The inhumane and degrading treatment of African foreign nationals is a threat to democracy and freedom in South Africa, Home Affairs Minister Naledi Pandor said on Thursday.

“Our brothers and sisters on the African continent played an important role in the achievement of democracy and freedom in South Africa,” she said in a speech prepared for delivery in Tshwane for World Refugees Day.

“They extended hospitality and asylum to many of our exiled leaders and their families during the oppression of apartheid.”

She said Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Angola, Lesotho, Zambia, Tanzania, and Botswana paid an “even higher price” for supporting the anti-apartheid struggle.

“Many of their citizens perished in raids into their territories by the apartheid security forces.”

She said using force or threats of violence to resolve grievances in South Africa was unacceptable.

“Anti-immigrant violence is inseparable from the evil of racism. The insidious nature of rising levels of ethnicism in our society is another cause for concern.

“We need to re-commit to the non-racialism we believed in during the days of our struggle against apartheid. We need to teach our young people to recognise bias, intolerance, and racism and arm them with the skills to combat these forms of discrimination.”

She said more needed to be done to teach people the value of diversity and the advantages of living with people from different cultures.

“We will not shirk our responsibilities under our refugee law or international conventions. South Africa remains one of the most liberal countries in regard to the benefits asylum seekers and refugees are allowed in our country.”

In South Africa, refugees and asylum seekers could move freely, work and enjoy basic services, Pandor said.

“It is true that we do not grant refugee status easily. Show me a country that does. But we do take longer than we should in determining refugee status.

“We are taking steps to process applications more efficiently and fairly. We are reviewing our procedures and implementing a fast-track capacity to process application status.”

Her department was working with international organisations to strengthen partnerships so “durable” solutions could be found for problems affecting refugees. South Africa was always open to refugees.

“Because we understand the importance of family and we understand the pain of losing the support and security of a family,” she said.

“I would like to reassure refugees here today of our admiration and support for [their] strength and resilience in the face of huge adversity.”

- Sapa

Fear grips Wallacedene

Cape Town - Groups of Zimbabwean men armed with knives and axes gathered early today in Wallacedene, Kraaifontein, to defend themselves against possible attacks by disgruntled locals.

This followed rioting in the suburb on Wednesday during which Somali and Chinese-owned shops were looted, roads were blocked, property was damaged and stones were hurled at police and journalists by residents frustrated by poor housing and service delivery.

Ironically, today is World Refugee Day, an annual commemoration established by the UN to “honour the courage, strength and determination of women, men and children who are forced to flee their homes under threat of persecution, conflict and violence”.

Police said about 1 000 residents had been involved in Wednesday’s rioting and that about 15 Somali shops had been attacked. Five people were arrested and charged with public violence.

A group of Zimbabweans told the Cape Argus on Wednesday that they were ready to protect their homes and businesses.

The group, armed with knives and an axe, patrolled in a bakkie and were inspecting a friend’s television sale and repair container shop that had been trashed and looted earlier on Thursday.

The owner of the shop, Bra Kapela, said he had lost uninsured merchandise worth more than R20 000.

One of the group was Shannon Siya, an environmental science student who moved to Wallacedene five years ago. He said Zimbabweans had “peacefully co-existed” with other people in Wallacedene for many years.

“Criminals and looters have taken advantage of the situation, and we hear that they want to target us now. We cannot put our faith in police, we must protect ourselves,” he said.

Nearby, looters were sifting through the remains of half a dozen other shops. Some had been torched and were still smouldering. Elsewhere, vandals were breaking open the latches of other shops.

A group of Zimbabwean women who left their Wallacedene homes for fear of being attacked gathered at Kraaifontein police station today.

One woman, who asked not to be named, said her house had been invaded by a group of men this morning who had demanded money. The woman’s neighbours had chased them off.

“Our Xhosa neighbours accept us, we live with them and we are good neighbours. It is only a small criminal element, mostly comprised of youngsters who don’t go to school and want to steal,” she said.

She complained that she had had to go to the police station for protection, “instead of the police coming to our community to protect us”.

What started as protests over allegations that government housing in the area had been handed over to beneficiaries from Khayelitsha and other “outsiders” turned to anarchy and looting yesterday.

Graham Daries, who said he applied for a home in the early 1990s, explained the frustrations which sparked the initial protests.

“We see people moving into these homes. They are Eskom employees, they are teachers and they are from far-flung townships,” he said.

“What aggravates the people more is that they have money. Within days of moving in, they start building high walls to enclose themselves from us, and mount DStv dishes on their walls.”

On Wednesday the Cape Argus found no sign of the Somali and Chinese businesspeople whose shops were attacked. Residents said they had fled.

The refugee rights NGO People Against Suffering, Oppression and Poverty condemned the violence and asked the police to provide security to “vulnerable” foreigners.

Police had not provided an update on the situation at the time of going to print.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Chaos as police fire tear gas at refugees

Cape Town - Police fired tear gas into a crowd outside the Home Affairs refugee centre on the Foreshore after some people tried to jump the queue and force their way in, refugees said yesterday.

“There were about 500 people in the queue outside and suddenly there were some people who jumped the queue and went for the doors,” said Mohamed Osman, waiting to renew his asylum-seeker temporary permit. “Then there was a lot of pushing and shoving and people shouting at each other.”

He said the police were called after security guards struggled to bring the situation under control.

“Police came and they fired tear gas. My eyes are still burning,” said Osman, a Somali who arrived in the country in 2008 and lives in Oudtshoorn.

Jeanott Mwangala, who hails from Congo, said: “There were about 1 000 people waiting outside when the doors opened at 8am and by 9am people were already having arguments in the queue.

“Then later in the day things became chaotic. Some people were fighting. I saw a lady collapse. When police came they sprayed tear gas. It was just hectic.”

Osman and Mwangala said there was no communication from Home Affairs officials at the centre. After waiting in vain for hours yesterday, they had to leave and would return today, they said.

Tuesday’s incident was the second in as many weeks after refugees in the queue were hosed with cold water and Cape Argus photographer Thomas Holder was allegedly assaulted by a guard when he took pictures of a chaotic situation outside the centre on May 30.

Days later, Home Affairs provincial head Yusuf Simons announced that the head of security at Customs House had been removed and investigated for bribery.

Simons said yesterday he was on leave and referred queries to acting provincial head Martha Mxgashe, who could not be reached.

Imizamo Yethu man beaten to death

Cape Town - A Zimbabwean man was beaten to death in Imizamo Yethu on Sunday, Hout Bay police spokeswoman Tanya Lesch reported on Tuesday night.

Sam Budhala was one of two men murdered in the township, Lesch said in a report posted on the Hout Bay Neighbourhood Watch website.

Lesch said a morning police patrol in Imizamo Yethu had noticed a commotion and found Budhala dead in Sobukwe Street.

“It seemed as if the victim had been beaten,” Lesch wrote on the website.

“The 35-year-old Sam Budhala, a Zimbabwean, was declared dead on the scene.

“It is alleged that there was a fight earlier during the day between the victim and the community.”

Hours earlier

, Benny Magengelele, 23, of Imizamo Yethu, died in hospital after being stabbed in the chest in Mkhonto Street, Lesch said.

She said a person had taken in for questioning, but then released.

In another incident on Sunday, in Salmander Road in Hangberg, four men armed with knives and a gun robbed a bread deliveryman of his phone and money, Lesch said.

“After robbing the victim the suspects fled on foot.”

No arrests had been made, Lesch said.

Imizamo Yethu was one of several areas affected by the countrywide xenophobic attacks in 2008 when foreigners were killed, injured or chased from their homes.

In Cape Town, authorities accomodated displaced people from Imizamo Yethu, Dunoon and Masiphumelele, among other places, in tents in Strandfontein, Gordon’s Bay and the SANDF base in Wynberg.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Xenophobia attacks not over: LHR

Xenophobia attacks in South Africa have not ended, Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR) said on Friday.

"It has been five years since [2008, when] co-ordinated attacks exploded across the country and led to the deaths of 64 people and the displacement of hundreds of thousands more," the head of LHR's strategic litigation unit, David Cote, said in a statement.

"Although the violence itself only lasted for a few weeks, the lingering fear has never quite gone away. This is partly due to the fact that these attacks never really ended."

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) released figures showing that at least three incidents a week were reported in 2012, LHR said.

"Those not killed have been severely injured."

He said there was no way of determining how much had been lost in business and property after attacks in Sasolburg, Orange Farm, Diepsloot, Booysens Park, and Sebokeng.

Last month, police reported unrest at Diepsloot, after Somali businessman Bishar Isaack was arrested for allegedly shooting dead two men, believed to be Zimbabweans, outside his shop when they allegedly tried to rob him.

Afterwards, residents stoned the shop and looted it and other businesses in the area.

Police arrested 45 people for public violence, housebreaking, and possession of unlicensed firearms.

In the same month, more than 90 people were arrested for protest-related crimes in Evaton, Orange Farm, and Sebokeng, south of Johannesburg.

Complaints of looting and vandalism of spaza shops belonging to foreigners were reported.

Violence also flared in Port Elizabeth, in Eastern Cape, where Somali shop owners were targeted.

Cote said the other reason xenophobia never went away was because nothing had really been done to end the attacks, or start the healing process.

"Even more disturbing is the government's denial of the real threat of xenophobia. Hate crime legislation, which would prioritise such crimes, has been languishing in committees for years."

SA ‘desensitised’ to xenophobia

South Africans are becoming desensitised to crime and xenophobic attacks, the Centre for Human Rights at the University of Pretoria said on Thursday.

“We fear that xenophobic attacks are becoming regular phenomena, and the South African population is becoming increasingly desensitised,” it said in a statement.

“While the law prohibits heinous deeds such as sexual and violent crimes, the South African population has grown apathetic to these issues with little hope of them being addressed.”

It called on all tertiary institutions to address the issue.

“We need to start formulating plans on how to incorporate the issue of xenophobia into syllabi, create better awareness around xenophobia, and disseminate information about the scope and protection of the South African Constitution.”

Last month, police reported unrest at Diepsloot after Somali businessman Bishar Isaack was arrested for allegedly shooting dead two men, believed to be Zimbabweans, outside his shop after they allegedly tried to rob him.

Afterwards, residents stoned the shop and looted it and other businesses in the area.

Police arrested 45 people for public violence, housebreaking, and possession of unlicensed firearms.

In the same month, more than 90 people were arrested for protest-related crimes in Evaton, Orange Farm, and Sebokeng, south of Johannesburg.

Complaints of looting and vandalism of spaza shops belonging to foreigners were reported.

Violence also flared in Port Elizabeth, in Eastern Cape, where Somali shop owners were targeted.

A wave of xenophobic violence in 2008 left at least 60 foreigners dead.

The centre said South Africans needed to remember that the leaders of the anti-apartheid struggle, including President Jacob Zuma, often took refuge in neighbouring countries.

“President... Zuma should therefore understand the importance of supporting people that fled their countries as a result of intolerable situations better than most,” it said.

“It is of the utmost importance that President Zuma seize this opportunity to convey a message... about the important role that refugees played in the anti-apartheid movement, and reiterate South Africa's obligation to support refugees from other African states.” - Sapa

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Shocking anti-migrant sentiment exposed

One in two South Africans wants foreign migrants to carry their IDs on them at all times and 63 percent of citizens want electrified fences on the country’s borders.

Half of the population also feel that migrants without the required documentation should never receive police protection and 14 percent believe that migrants, regardless of their legal status, enter the country with the main purpose of committing crime.

These shocking findings come from the latest survey by the Southern African Migration Programme on South African attitudes towards foreigners, done every four years to assess levels of xenophobia and identify possible areas of concern in which intervention may be necessary. The xenophobia survey was conducted in November and December 2010 in all nine provinces.

Census enumeration areas were used for household selection and respondent selection was random.

Respondents were all South African citizens and the survey used the same questions and indices as the survey in 2006, with additional questions about xenophobic violence and the Fifa World Cup.

The questionnaire was translated and administered in English, Afrikaans, Xhosa, Zulu and Tswana. The final sample of 2 400 citizens was weighted to make it nationally representative.

The xenophobia index we use in our surveys is calculated using answers to 15 questions for every participant and those with higher scores are assessed as being more xenophobic.

Important positive findings from the latest survey, published this week, include a noticeable reduction in the intensity of xenophobic sentiments among several groups, including coloured South Africans, Afrikaans-speakers, South Africans who speak the same languages as migrants, and citizens with low levels of education and income. Attitudes to migrants from other southern African countries have improved. At least 41 percent want mandatory HIV testing of refugees as compared to 60 percent in 2006.

One in three thought migrants contributed to skills development, an increase from 25 percent in 2006.

In 2010, close to one-third wanted refugees to live in border camps.

Support for this discriminatory policy has dropped from nearly 50 percent in the previous survey.

Interestingly, in 2006 xenophobia was inversely tied to income: the higher the income, the lower the xenophobia scores. But in the latest survey, levels of xenophobia increased with increasing income. Those in the lowest income groups were the least xenophobic.

However, the proportion of South Africans willing to transform their anti-foreigner attitudes into forceful action against migrants remained constant, suggesting that no lessons were learned from the mass xenophobic violence of May 2008.

The number of South Africans ready to remove migrants violently increased slightly from 2006 to 2010. South Africans unwilling to engage or participate in such actions declined in 2010 and the proportion of those prepared to unite with others in collective action against migrants remains unchanged from 2006.

Researchers asked questions about citizen reactions to the violence of May 2008.

Respondents were asked to identify what they felt were the underlying reasons. Close to half felt guilty about the violence; 54 percent agreed that migrants did not deserve such treatment and a similar proportion indicated that they would not endorse such actions.

However, a third was unmoved by the violence and a minority showed their approval. These differences are erased when it comes to offering reasons for the violence. Most accepted popular explanations or were apathetic.

For instance, more than 60 percent thought the violence occurred because of migrants’ involvement in crime or because they took jobs from South Africans or were culturally different.

While South Africans expressed their discomfort with the violence, they held migrants and refugees responsible for it, falling back on migrant stereotypes and falsehoods to justify it.

The survey looked for dissimilarities on a variety of indices in hot spot areas of the 2008 violence and other areas and did not find any significant differences.

It did find that residents of hot spot areas were less accepting of the violence compared to other South Africans, but fewer felt guilty about it or wanted to do something to repair it.

While violence directed at migrants and refugees has certainly not disappeared since mid-2008, it is still explained away by government officials as the work of criminal and antisocial elements.

With the continuing attacks on people, their shops and other property, there is an urgent need for a concerted effort by citizens and the state to counteract the negative attitudes that exist, which fly in the face of the rights and entitlements that the constitution affords foreigners.

Myths that underlie many xenophobic attitudes need to be dispelled.

Although the census shows that less than 5 percent of South Africa’s residents were born outside the country, more than half believe foreigners constitute a majority of the country’s population.

The same applies to jobs.

While there is evidence that migrants often bring necessary skills into the country and create jobs for locals, South Africans want very few migrants, even when jobs are available for them.

Globally, South Africa is the country most opposed to immigration, with many favouring a complete prohibition on the entry of migrants.

At least 30 percent of South Africans probed in a recent international survey wanted a total ban on all migration to the country for work. This was higher than any other country surveyed.

South Africa also had by far the lowest number of people who wanted a migration policy linked to the availability of jobs.

The fact that the convictions of those willing to use violence to exclude or expel migrants from communities and join others to achieve this end remain fixed is cause for great concern.

Disturbing signals from the local survey include that one in four South Africans is ready to jointly prevent migrants from neighbouring countries operating a business. This is a troubling indicator because of the escalation of attacks on migrant-owned businesses in recent years.

It is unsurprising that the Ministry of Trade and Industry has joined this xenophobic campaign in its proposed Licensing of Businesses Bill, which will give the police and citizens new powers to harass and destroy the operations of migrant-owned small business.

A quarter of South Africans are willing to prevent migrants from moving into their neighbourhood and some 20 percent would take action to prevent the enrolment of children from migrant families in the same schools as theirs.

Despite a fall in support from 2006, one-quarter of South Africans still want all migrants to be deported, irrespective of their status.

Half the population feel that irregular migrants should never receive police protection and only 18 percent want them given legal protection.

Refugees fared marginally better, with 36 percent of respondents wanting to give them protection through the police.

The recognised vulnerability of such migrants to poor treatment, extortion by state officials and to xenophobic violence makes this a disturbing fact.

To change the myopic siege mentality that the survey shows still exists, we need a state-owned and promoted comprehensive education programme that reaches into schools, workplaces, communities and corridors of the public service.

The programme should breed tolerance and spell out the rights foreigners are entitled to when in South Africa, as well as the benefits of interaction with people from other countries.

Interestingly, citizens who have no contact or interaction with migrants are the most opposed to them, suggesting that increased contact between migrants and citizens has a beneficial effect on tolerance and xenophobic views.

There is reason for hope in the decline in intensity of xenophobic sentiment because the growing contact between South Africans and migrants has had a positive effect in softening attitudes.

However, this is a slow process.

South Africans continue to feel threatened by the presence of migrants and want to handle these anxieties by limiting the numbers of migrants and refugees, deterring their entry into South Africa and making conditions difficult for their existence here by restricting the rights and entitlements they can enjoy. The presence of an unyielding cohort ready to deploy violence to manage such anxieties is our most disturbing finding.

Until we make the necessary effort to change these realities, migrants and refugees will continue to be “soft targets” of discrimination and violence.

Xenophobic attitudes that are entrenched, pervasive and negative need to be attacked with the same commitment that the government and civil society show towards the scourge of racism in post-apartheid South Africa.

* Crush is the director of the Southern African Migration Programme and an honorary professor at UCT.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Competing for jobs sparks xenophobia - expert

SOUTH Africans see foreign nationals as unfair competition in finding employment, according to an expert at the Institute for Security Studies, Johan Burger.

He was responding to the recent protests in which shops belonging to foreign nationals were looted in Sebokeng and the surrounding areas.

Burger warned that as long as unemployment rates remained high amid a constant influx of foreign nationals to the country, it could spark xenophobia.

“Xenophobia is difficult to control, but the reality is that it won’t go away unless government does something.

“Unemployed locals feel that foreign nationals have an unfair advantage over them when it comes to getting the jobs available,” said Burger.

He also cautioned against the spate of service delivery related protests and violent strikes the country has been experiencing in recent years.

“Our government must seriously address issues of public discontent.

“The truth is there are many shack dwellers out there who are not happy with the way things have been going and who say there is a bigger potential threat to safety as well and we must be worried,” he said.

Burger said violent service delivery protests have increased by 1 600% over the last eight years.

“In 2011 alone, violent incidents were close to 80%, and we had 173 violent incidents reported last year,” he said.

Burger said there had also been a 23% increase in violent strikes in the space of a year.

“Once somebody start the spark, there will certainly be an explosion,” he said. 

Monday, May 27, 2013

'Send foreigners to camps'

The Greater Gauteng Business Forum, an association of small shop owners, has told foreign businessmen trading in townships in and around Gauteng to "go back home".

Orange Farm, the neighbouring Sebokeng settlement, south of Johannesburg, and Diepsloot, north of the city, have all been hit by violence and looting that targets foreign owners of shops.

The association's chairman for the Tshwane region, Mpane Baloyi, said the government must stop issuing asylum permits to foreigners, or confine them to refugee camps.

"These people are not here because they have run away from their countries because they are in danger.

"They are here to destroy local business and people, particularly local shop owners, are boiling with anger.

"If nothing is done about this, there will be war," he threatened.

But Mpane denied that his group sought violence.

He said the association preferred to discuss with the government the effect the proliferation of foreign-owned shops had on local businesses.

"We have held a number of meetings with officials from the office of the Gauteng premier [Nomvula Mokonyane] and there has been a positive response.

"We have been trying in vain to secure an appointment with Home Affairs Minister [Naledi Pandor]," he said. Yesterday, 34-year-old Ethiopian Tegese Kenoro said he had to beg for his life while held at gunpoint at the Vukazchke supermarket, in Diepsloot.

About 20 people forced their way into the shop on Sunday night and stole R100000 worth of goods.

Kenoro, who lives at the supermarket, has been in South Africa for the past three years. He said he had been left with nothing but the clothes on his back.

"I am scared for my life but I have nowhere else to go.

"Everything is gone, I don't know how I am going to live my life," said Kenoro.

On Sunday night two men said to be looters were shot by a Somali shopkeeper.

Several foreigner-owned shops in the area have been looted. Many shop owners yesterday closed shop fearing more looting.

The police said calm had returned to the area, but police spokesman Colonel Lungelo Dlamini said the police would continue to monitor the situation.

He said that nine people were arrested in Diepsloot last night for public violence and possession of suspected stolen goods.

Ward councillor Abraham Mabuke said a meeting would be held today "to convince the public to accept foreign nationals in our area and to preach the spirit of ubuntu among the community".

The director of the University of the Witwatersrand's African Centre for Migration and Society, Loren Landau, said there was a possibility that the nation would have to endure more of the xenophobic attacks that blighted 2008.

Landau said the attacks were not spontaneous but co-ordinated at local level by ward councillors who stood to benefit politically, and by business owners who would benefit if foreign competitors were driven away.

"In almost every instance that we have examined, there is a political or economic incentive and at least some level of local organisation.

"It is not angry people waking up one day and making a decision. Someone stands to benefit from the violence," he said.

Since 2008, 320 people have been killed in xenophobic attacks.

Orange Farm: Feeding the xenophobia beast

Orange Farm and Sebokeng are brimming with so-called xenophobic violence but the attacks are inseparable from other issues stalking these communities.

Orange Farm, south of Johannesburg, and the neighbouring Sebokeng informal settlement, are brimming with tension following so-called xenophobic attacks on foreign shop owners on Friday but the attacks are inseparable from a plethora of issues stalking these communities.

Chief among these is the competition for scarce resources, such as RDP houses and customers for informal traders, who must rely on a largely unemployed community for income.

On Friday, the recently launched Workers and Socialist Party (Wasp) organised a protest in Orange Farm against proposed evictions for illegal RDP owners.

The looting and pillaging that followed – and the driving out of foreign shop owners in the area – overshadowed that protest by far.

The events were almost identical to those of February 2010 when school children were involved in the looting of foreign-owned shops in Orange Farm, overshadowing another service delivery protest.

This time around, the unrelated protest was organised by Wasp, which denies having anything to do with the looting. But the party does recognise that Orange Farm is a community competing for scarce resources, and in 2010 – as in 2013 – it was in places such as Orange Farm where xenophobia was left untreated and to fester.

Looting
Gauteng police spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Lungelo Dlamini said the events began on Monday with a service delivery protest outside Sebokeng, a settlement that falls just short of the Gauteng border. Roads were blocked and the protest quickly spread to neighbouring Evaton and Orange Farm, about 20 minutes away.

Police suspect the roads were blocked in an attempt to prevent officers from accessing the areas where the looting took place.

By Thursday, the police advised foreigners in the area to leave and even helped some of them to pack up their shops and homes. (They have not returned to the area.)

Police also received information that schools would be closed on Friday so that children could participate in the protest.

That afternoon, shops in Sebokeng were looted and their foreign owners were run out of town. The looting soon crossed the Gauteng border and spread to Orange Farm where over 100 people were arrested. They will appear in court this week.

The incident had headlines screaming comparisons to the 2008 xenophobic violence, which left over 60 people dead and thousands displaced.

Xenophobic tone
Despite Friday's events taking on a blatantly xenophobic tone, Gauteng police cannot call them as such. One reason for this is that the shop owners were not physically attacked – they were merely chased away. Another is that the police simply don't know enough.

Dlamini said a local councillor met with looters on Friday evening to gauge the reasons behind the looting but the outcome was not relayed to the police – and the police did not inquire about it.

It was widely reported that the looting was inspired by the death of a Sebokeng resident, allegedly at the hands of a Pakistani national.

Dlamini said the police had no intelligence to this effect. There were no recent murders in the area, he said, and no Pakistanis recently became murder suspects.

Young people still lingering in the streets after the looters were arrested were unwilling to talk to the media, save to say that all Pakistanis were "rotten potatoes".

And then one young man let slip that, throughout the day, a rumour spread that the looting was instigated by a local shop owner who was unable to compete with the foreign shops' lower prices. At least, these were the speculations of a few teenagers, who stole the remaining merchandise inside the shops after the looting stopped.

Forced removals
The competition – for customers and the resources they spend on these informal traders' wares – extends to the competition for houses.

Sebokeng and Orange Farm were born out of apartheid's attempts to create settlements for the victims of its forced removals policies. Many residents remain homeless and allegations have surfaced that they are being forced to pay for RDP houses by corrupted local officials.

About two weeks ago, reports emerged that residents, frustrated by this, broke the locks of newly-built RDP houses and moved in.

Democratic Alliance leader Helen Zille visited Orange Farm that day. She proposed her party's own solutions to the area's multitude of problems: chief among them was the promise that the party would implement the youth wage subsidy if elected in 2014.

The City of Johannesburg said progress was made at Orange Farm and Sebokeng, with an ICT hub and a mall established at both settlements. Houses have been built but hundreds of people still live in shacks, their names gathering dust on RDP waiting lists.

With jobs in the Johannesburg city centre more than 40km away, informal entrepreneurs thrive while others are left to look for work on the surrounding farms or in the mines.

Dlamini said the police are treating Friday's incident as criminal for now and they were not working with other governmental bodies to deal with the underlying causes. The only inter-state intervention taking place at the moment is an attempt by the police to assist a local councillor in arranging a place for the foreigners to stay at a local community hall.

Evidence of danger
The shop owners spent Friday night sleeping outside the local police station; broken windows in their ransacked shops were evidence of the danger they faced earlier that day.

For Wasp, the situation is not directly linked to the 2008 violence. But the recipe for xenophobic attacks is certainly there.

Wasp spokesperson Mamatlwe Sebei said that although the incident last week should not be seen as xenophobia, the current housing dilemma in the area would continue to create the right conditions for xenophobia to breed.

"Some of these RDP houses are owned by foreigners while some locals have been on the waiting list for years. It's a policy that Wasp opposes because we need to fight against all xenophobic tendencies in the working class," Sebei said.

At Orange Farm on Friday morning, the party joined in a protest around mooted plans for the eviction of residents who occupied RDP houses. Residents said government built around 1 000 RDP houses but that many of these were illegally sold to those who could afford to buy them and that their rightful owners were prevented from moving in.

About 200 of these houses are apparently illegally occupied. Residents have refused to vacate the houses unless the process is started afresh and the houses are transparently and fairly allocated.

Sebei said: "The government is doing nothing about the fact that those houses have been sold by the officials at the City of Johannesburg. All we hear is the typical political rhetoric, that the law must take its course – which basically means inaction on government's part."

Scarce resources
Sebei said the competition for scarce resources contributes to a climate where the have-nots are suspicious of the haves – especially when the latter are foreigners.

"When people are desperate and surrounded by crushing poverty and when they are told there are only a few houses for so many – only a few jobs – there is scarcity of resources created by capitalism and the liberal programmes of the government. Under these conditions, people are willing to believe lies spread about their 'competitors'– in this case, foreign nationals working in the area," he said.

For Sebei, community struggle is an essential pillar of the resistance to capitalism. Wasp wants a unified working class and says the labour unrest in 2012 actually showed that this was possible.

"Think about what happened in the mines in 2012: there are hundreds of foreign workers underground but we did not see xenophobic attacks there. It's an example of solidarity of the working class in the best traditions of the struggle against apartheid," he said.

The City of Johannesburg responded late on Sunday night.

Member of the City of Johannesburg's mayoral committee on health and social development, Nonceba Molwele said the city condemned the looting and cautioned against labelling the attacks as xenophobic. 

"Our initial analysis with Orange Farm residents disagrees with this perception. Communities largely blamed youth which acted in a 'not so cool' delinquent way. More hard work must be done to root out ignorance and all other forms of discrimination against fellow residents at Orange Farm and in general, citywide," he said.


- M&G

Friday, February 1, 2013

Police on high alert in E Cape after xenophobic attacks

Police remain on high alert at Kwa-Nobuhle in Uitenhage in the Eastern Cape where public violence has broken out, leading to a string of looting incidents.

 This after two days of unrest where Somali traders had to flee from their shops as angry residents began looting them.

 At least 10 shops were looted on Wednesday night with one being set alight. Last night police had to escort various other Somalians as tensions peaked.

Uitenhage police are investigating a case of murder and public violence following a string of looting incidents also at Khayelitsha townships over the past two days.

Thirteen people were arrested, with four allegedly found in possession of stolen property. Tensions escalated last night following the death of a teenager who was shot dead and police are investigating a case of murder.

Somali Association deputy chairperson, Ahmed Genaye says: “Today they looted everywhere, all the shops. When I investigated the matter they say that the community is okay."

- SABC