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South African police fire rubber bullets to break up clashes

Attacks against foreigners have become frequent in recent years, fuelled by unemployme­nt

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South African police fired rubber bullets and stun grenades to break up clashes between local protesters and migrants in Pretoria yesterday at a march against immigratio­n.

Shops and homes owned by foreigners have been looted and torched in recent weeks, with some South Africans alleging that the properties were brothels and drug dens.

Attacks against foreigners have erupted regularly in recent years, fuelled by South Africa’s high unemployme­nt and poverty levels.

Police in Pretoria formed lines to keep apart 500 protesters as tensions rise between some South Africans and migrants from Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Somalia, Pakistan and elsewhere.

“We are fed up with people bringing drugs to the youth and the crimes that go with it,” said a South African marcher who declined to be named. As the stand-off continued, Clement Melfort, 26, a migrant from Zimbabwe who had come to see the march, said: “We are not afraid of fighting.”

President Jacob Zuma condemned the latest wave of xenophobic unrest, saying that there had been “threats of violence and acts of intimidati­on and destructio­n of property directed at non-nationals.”

Crackdown

“Residents in some communitie­s blame non-nationals for the escalating crimes, especially drug traffickin­g,” the presidency said in a statement.

Zuma called for South Africans not to blame migrants for the country’s widespread crime problems, but said the government would crack down on drug-dealing and illegal immigrants.

In the last week, more than 20 shops have been targeted in Atteridgev­ille, outside Pretoria, while residents in Rosettenvi­lle, south of Johannesbu­rg, attacked at least 12 houses.

“We have decided to not to leave the house [during the march],” Alain Bome, a 47-year-old from Democratic Republic of the Congo who has been in South Africa for 14 years, said.

“We know very well there have been attacks. We are scared.”

In 2008, South Africa experience­d its worst bout of xenophobic violence, which left 62 people dead.

The Nigerian government this week called for the African Union to step in to stop “xenophobic attacks” on its citizens in South Africa, claiming 20 Nigerians were killed last year.

South African authoritie­s dismiss such numbers, saying many violent deaths in the country are due to criminal activity rather than anti-immigrant sentiment.

In 2008, South Africa experience­d its worst bout of xenophobic violence, which left 62 people dead.

 ?? AFP ?? Riot officers fire to disperse Somali and foreign nationals clashing with South African nationals during a march against illegal immigrants yesterday in Pretoria.
AFP Riot officers fire to disperse Somali and foreign nationals clashing with South African nationals during a march against illegal immigrants yesterday in Pretoria.

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