Toronto Star

End ‘shocking and unacceptab­le’ attacks, Zuma says

Immigrants blamed for taking jobs in tough economic times

- LYNSEY CHUTEL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

JOHANNESBU­RG— President Jacob Zuma on Thursday urged South Africans to stop attacking immigrants from Africa and South Asia, but hundreds threatened peace marchers in a city where days of violence have killed at least five people.

In the days before the peace march in Durban, more than 2,000 foreigners fled to camps on sports fields around the city, afraid to return home, according to Gift of the Givers, an aid organizati­on.

Zuma, in a speech to Parliament that was broadcast live on TV, called the attacks “shocking and unacceptab­le,” adding that “no amount of frustratio­n and anger can ever justify the attacks on foreign nationals.”

With unemployme­nt and poverty levels high in South Africa, the immigrants are accused of taking jobs that should go to South Africans.

In the city of Durban along the Indian Ocean, one of Zuma’s wives, Thobeka Madiba-Zuma, encouraged thousands who had participat­ed in a peace march.

A short distance away, hundreds of locals gathered, jeering and insulting the participan­ts, local broadcaste­rs reported.

The U.S. ambassador to South Africa, who was born in the then Zaire to Haitian parents, spoke in defence of the immigrants.

“As an immigrant to my own country, my heart goes out to those who have been attacked for being different,” said Patrick Gaspard in a statement emailed by the U.S. Embassy.

The fear felt by many was palpable as dozens of foreigners sought refuge at a police station outside of Johannesbu­rg and stayed there overnight, according to a police spokesman, Col. Lungelo Dlamini.

Some foreigners from other African nations have armed themselves with machetes and knives.

The second spate of attacks this year in South Africa began after the Zulu monarch, King Goodwill Zwelithini, said that immigrants should “take their bags and go.” Zulus comprise one of South Africa’s largest ethnic groups.

“We must deal with our own lice,” he said in a speech that was recorded and sent to local broadcaste­r eNCA. He also complained about foreignown­ed shops.

South Africa’s Human Rights Commission said it has received two complaints of hate speech levelled against the king. Commission spokesman Isaac Mangena said it has received several other complaints of xenophobia not directly related to the king’s comments.

South Africa is a major destinatio­n for asylum seekers and refugees, and the country currently houses more than 300,000 asylum seekers, according to projection­s by the office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees, said UNHCR spokeswoma­n Tina Ghelli.

Minister of Internatio­nal Relations Maite Nkoana-Mashabane will on Friday meet with diplomats from several African countries to discuss the government’s efforts to protect immigrants, her office said in a statement.

The government­s of Malawi and Zimbabwe have begun efforts to repatriate citizens affected by the attacks. Zimbabwean musicians have also called for a boycott of South African artists.

“Xenophobia today can easily mutate into genocide tomorrow. Stop It,” tweeted Zimbabwe Informatio­n Minister Jonathan Moyo, adding that the Zulu king should “extinguish what he ignited.”

In Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, some locals believed that Somalis would have been safer in their troubled native country, rather than South Africa.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? People run after a skirmish between local residents and foreign nationals during a march in Durban.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES People run after a skirmish between local residents and foreign nationals during a march in Durban.

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