The Citizen (KZN)

Home affairs’ Gigaba calls for unity

A crime committed by an immigrant in SA is not worse, says the minister.

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i – simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Minister reveals planned white paper on local immigratio­n management.

Crime is not better when committed by a South African, or worse when committed by an immigrant. This was the message from concerned Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba, who yesterday appealed to South Africans to stop labelling crime by the identity of its perpetrato­rs.

The minister was addressing congregant­s at the Lighthouse Chapel Internatio­nal church in Sunnyside, Pretoria, following Friday’s anti-immigrant march in the capital.

The march, intended to be peaceful, had sparked bouts of violence across the city over the weekend. At least 136 protesters had been nabbed by Saturday, according to Acting Police Commission­er Khomotso Phahlane.

Violent protests had started in Atteridgev­ille, while members of the Mamelodi Concerned Residents movement were embroiled in violence.

But Gigaba spoke out against the xenophobic labelling of crime locally.

“Just as we do not talk about black crime and white crime, Zulu crime or Tswana crime, let us not talk about immigrant crime,” Gigaba said.

“Just as a car hijacker who happens to be Zulu does not mean all Zulus do crime, so a drug dealer who happens to be a Nigerian does not mean all Nigerians do crime. Crime is crime regardless of who commits it.”

He also spoke out against City of Joburg mayor Herman Mashaba and those who publicly spoke out against foreigners, saying they were the main instigator­s of the anti-immigrant violence that had broken out in Gauteng this month.

Gigaba also announced that a white paper on immigratio­n management in South Africa was on the cards.

This was in a bid to deal “more holistical­ly with the conflicts that arise out of immigratio­n”.

Because a drug dealer happens to be a Nigerian, it does not make all Nigerians drug dealers. Malusi Gigaba Home Affairs Minister

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