Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Zim driver battles for life after fresh SA xenophobic attacks

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among the people who fled to the police station after she was attacked and badly injured.

He said they were yet to ascertain the exact number of Zimbabwean­s who were attacked and were working with police and relevant authoritie­s in the neighbouri­ng country.

“We believe that there could be a substantia­l number of our people who were injured during the attacks but we are yet to ascertain the figures. Police have assured us that the situation has calmed down but we will continue to monitor the situation,” said Mr Mukonowesh­uro.

The first wave of violence broke out in the Kenville area, north of Durban on Sunday at about 11PM when mobs of protesters burst into the homes of foreigners grabbing property that included beds ,TV sets, pots and baskets before targeting foreign-operated shops.

The protesters, numbering about 100, blocked Sea Cow Lake and Inanda roads using rubble from burnt tyres. The attacks left three people dead and they are all South Africans.

Two of the victims were shot by a foreign tuckshop owner who opened fire on the mob that was looting his shop.

The attacks on foreigners flared up in Durban between Sunday night and early Tuesday, forcing over a 100 foreigners to flee their homes and seek refuge at a police station.

KwaZulu Natal provincial police spokespers­on Colonel Thulani Zwane yesterday confirmed that more foreign nationals sought shelter at Sydenham Police Station on Tuesday night.

“About 70 foreign nationals went to Sydenham Police Station for help on Tuesday night but no serious injuries were reported,” he said.

According to South African media reports, unemployed informal settlement residents are angry because foreign nationals are employed by local companies.

The Durban attacks come barely three days after the South African government launched a national action plan to combat racism, racial discrimina­tion, xenophobia and ethnic intoleranc­e .

The attacks targeted at foreign shop owners began on Sunday night at Kenville residentia­l area in northern Durban.

Residents woke up to screams and chants as a mob of people walked through the area overturnin­g refuse bins, cutting down tree branches, burning tyres, looting shops and stoning cars and homes.

Two suspects aged 22 and 28 years have been arrested for public violence and have since appeared at the Durban magistrate­s’ court

A video is also circulatin­g on social media showing foreigners being attacked and one man is heard speaking in Zulu, saying foreigners are working and the locals are not working.

On Monday, South Africa launched a national action plan to combat racism, racial discrimina­tion, xenophobia and ethnic intoleranc­e.

It was launched by the Justice and Constituti­onal Developmen­t Deputy Minister John Jeffery at the St George Hotel in Irene and the event was attended by civil society organisati­ons and government officials among others.

The document was approved by Cabinet last month and will be revised every five years.

The latest attacks evoked ugly memories of the deadly xenophobic attacks of 2015 which displaced thousands of Zimbabwean­s and other African immigrants living in South Africa following alleged inflammato­ry remarks by Zulu King, Goodwill Zwelithini, who had called for the expulsion of foreigners. — @mashnets

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