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Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - Web posted at 10:22:51 GMT SA police try to stop anti-foreigner attacks REIGER PARK - Police fired rubber bullets and made arrests yesterday to try to quell outbursts of anti-foreigner violence in and around Johannesburg, and said the death toll had reached 22. |
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Foreigners - many of them Zimbabweans who had fled economic collapse and political violence in their homeland - were being driven from shacks in squatter camps yesterday. Men bearing clubs and sticks patrolled in groups along the road near one camp, apparently South Africans guarding against any foreigners trying to return. South Africans are struggling to find jobs and buy food as prices rise, and they appear to be targeting foreigners they see as competing with them for scarce resources. Police spokesman Govindsamy Mariemuthoo said that, since the violence broke out last week, 22 people had been killed - beaten, burned or slashed. Mariemuthoo said more than 200 people had been arrested on charges including murder, rape and robbery. "We're not talking about xenophobia, we're talking about criminality," Mariemuthoo said. Mariemuthoo said police reservists and officers from other regions were being called in to help. The violence would likely only add to South Africa's image as a crime capital - it has a murder rate of more than 50 per day - just as it prepares to host visitors from around the world for the 2010 Soccer World Cup. The South African Red Cross and other aid groups appealed for funds to care for hundreds displaced by the violence. Foreigners fled to police stations, churches and community halls. South Africans shocked by the violence were dropping by the impromptu shelters with food, clothing, blankets and other donations. Gina Themba nursed her two-week-old daughter on the floor of a room at a police station in downtown Johannesburg on Monday. She said neighbours among whom she had lived for three years broke into her house the night before and demanded she leave. She said she did not understand why. Such scenes were repeated in pockets across the Johannesburg region, with the poorest of the poor turning on one another. Lisa Letsoso, an 18-year-old South African living in the Ramaphosa squatter camp near the eastern Johannesburg suburb of Reiger Park, wondered where it would end. "The South Africans are fighting the foreigners. Now the foreigners are fighting back. Everyone is suffering," Letsoso said. - Nampa-AP 'Please, please stop' CAPE TOWN - "Please, please stop." This was the message yesterday from Nobel peace laureate and struggle icon Desmond Tutu in the wake of the outburst of xenophobic violence of the past few days. "Please stop. Please stop the violence now," the churchman said in an impassioned statement. "This is not how we behave. These are our sisters and brothers. Please, please stop." Tutu, who once intervened in the apartheid years to prevent a mob necklacing a man, said that when South Africans were fighting against apartheid they had been supported by people around the world and particularly in Africa. Although they were poor, other Africans welcomed South Africans as refugees, and allowed liberation movements to have bases in their territory even if it meant those countries were going to be attacked by the South African Defence Force. "We can't repay them by killing their children. We can't disgrace our struggle by these acts of violence," he said. "It is as if we were back in the days of the necklace. "The world is shocked and is going to laugh at us and mock us. "We are disgracing our struggle heroes. Our children will condemn us in the future." Nampa-Sapa |
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