The Guardian (USA)

South Africa: 15 dead after gunmen open fire at bar in Soweto township

- Jason Burke in Soweto

Gunmen used automatic rifles and powerful handguns to kill 15people and injure a further eight in a mass shooting at a tavern in Johannesbu­rg’s Soweto township in the early hours of Sunday.

The attack on the Orlando East bar in the Nomzamo informal settlement occurred shortly after midnight when a group of men arrived in a Toyota minibus and entered the bar, neighbours told the Guardian.

Police said victims had been shot “at random” while they were drinking, contradict­ing early reports that they had been targeted specifical­ly. Such shootings are often linked to gangland vendettas or turf battles.

Col Dimakatso Sello, a national police spokespers­on, said a special team had been formed to investigat­e the attack, led by a senior detective.

“There was no history of problems with the tavern as far as the police are concerned but the township has been difficult for us because there is no electricit­y and so it’s very dark,” Sello said.

The Gauteng province police commission­er, Lt Gen Elias Mawela, told reporters that many victims had died as they attempted to flee.

“All of a sudden they heard some gunshots, that is when people tried to run out of the tavern. We don’t have the full details at the moment of what is the motive, and why they were targeting these people,” he said.

“You can see that a high-calibre firearm was used and it was shooting randomly. You can see that every one of those people were struggling to get out of the tavern … The number of cartridges shows it was a group of people [shooting],” Mawela added.

Rifles and a 9mm pistol were used in the attack, Sello said.

The shooting underlines the continuing lawlessnes­s in parts of South Africa, and the very high rates of violent crime, often involving firearms. Four people were killed in a similar attack on a tavern in Pietermari­tzburg.

Nomzamo township is one of the poorest parts of Soweto, a satellite city on the outskirts of Johannesbu­rg made famous by the role it played during the struggle against apartheid. Much of Soweto is now considered relatively affluent. Tourists flock to museums, restaurant­s and Nelson Mandela’s home, a mile or so from the scene of the shootings.

However, Nomzamo, a cluster of tin and wood huts with a line of portable toilets and a few scattered concrete homes, is a reminder of the deep poverty that persists in South Africa.

“It’s tough here and it’s getting worse. It is very crowded, there are no jobs, no electricit­y, nothing,” said Thabiso Letlojane, 31, who has lived in the township all his life.

Letlojane had been drinking in the tavern hours before the attack. “It’s just a normal pub. It was very calm in the evening. We are really shocked. It just shows that no one is safe, especially in this area. People are shooting all the time, every day every night. You can’t sleep without hearing the sound of the guns,” he told the Guardian.

Gladys Nkona said she blamed the African National Congress, which has held power since the end of the apartheid regime almost 30 years ago. The ruling party has been hit by a series of corruption charges and is often the target of protest by local communitie­s who want better services.

“The police do nothing. The government does nothing. They don’t care about poor people. For them it’s just about filling their own pockets,” Nkona, 42, said.

Officials said the tavern was operating according to its licence, and that all of the casualties were of legal drinking age. One has been discharged from hospital after treatment. Seven others are still in serious or critical conditions. The age of drinkers has become a focus after 21 teenagers were found dead in a tavern in the city of East

London two weeks ago. The cause of those deaths has not yet been announced by authoritie­s, but the victims were neither shot nor crushed in a stampede.

ANC officials said they had done much to help the residents of Nomzamo township.

“Five years ago, there were no proper houses and there’s been a lot of progress. If you look across Soweto you can see the developmen­t. You give people a start and they help themselves. There is harmony here,” said Stan Itshegetse­ng, a regional ANC official, who said he had come to Nomzamo after hearing of the shootings to “listen to the people”.

The country’s murder rate dropped substantia­lly during Covid lockdowns but rose sharply in the last three months of 2021, according to the most recent statistics. Alcohol outlets are the fourth most common location for killings in South Africa.

 ?? Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? Security forces and forensic personnel inspect the scene of the shooting in Soweto. Photograph:
Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Security forces and forensic personnel inspect the scene of the shooting in Soweto. Photograph:
 ?? Ihsaan Haffejee/AFP/Getty Images ?? A relative of one of the victims is consoled as South African police officers refuse to let her cross the police barrier. Photograph:
Ihsaan Haffejee/AFP/Getty Images A relative of one of the victims is consoled as South African police officers refuse to let her cross the police barrier. Photograph:

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