The Scotsman

President vows to restore order in South Africa

- By ANDREW MELDRUM

South African president Cyril Ramaphosa has pledged to restore order after a week of violence set off by the imprisonme­nt of former leader Jacob Zuma. Mr Ramaphosa said it was "planned and co-ordinated" but the instigator­s will be prosecuted.

South African president Cyril Ramaphosa has pledged to restore order after a week of violence set off by the imprisonme­nt of former leader Jacob Zuma.

Speaking in the port city of Durban in hard-hit Kwazulunat­al province, Zuma's home area, Mr Ramaphosa said the chaos and violence had been "planned and co-ordinated" but the instigator­s will be prosecuted.

Standing at the entrance to a looted mall and surrounded by soldiers, he said: "We have identified a good number of them and we will not allow anarchy and mayhem to just unfold in our country."

As army tanks rolled by the trashed Bridge City mall, Mr Ramaphosa said the deployment of 25,000 troops would end the violence and rampant theft in Kwazulu-natal and Gauteng provinces.

South Africa's unrest erupted after Zuma began serving a 15-month sentence for contempt of court for refusing to comply with a court order to give evidence at a state-backed inquiry investigat­ing allegation­s of corruption while he was president from 2009 to 2018.

Protests quickly escalated into looting in township areas. In Durban, rioters attacked retail areas and industrial centres where they emptied warehouses and set them alight.

More than 2,200 people have been arrested for theft and vandalism and 117 people have died, said Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, acting minister in the presidency. Many were trampled to death when shops were looted, according to police.

An estimated 16 billion rand (£720 million) worth of stock was stolen in Kwazulu-natal with at least 800 retail shops looted, a mayor in the province said.

Mxolisi Kaunda, mayor of ethekwini, a municipali­ty in Kwazulu-natal that includes the main city Durban, said 16bn rand had been lost in damage to property.

The army rollout in Kwazulu-natal is expected to restore order in the coastal province within a few days. An uneasy calm has been secured in Gauteng province, which includes Johannesbu­rg, South Africa's largest city and industrial hub.

n Kwazulu-natal, Mr Zuma's home province and the epicentre of the violence, many have been queuing for food, with some lining up from the early hours of yesterday morning just to get a few items.

In a sign of a return to stability, a strategic highway linking Durban and Johannesbu­rg reopened on Friday after being closed for a week, officials announced.

The unrest first flared at the Mooi River toll gate for the N3 highway where more than 20 trucks were burned.

The military will patrol the highway but drivers are warned to use the road with care. "It is vitally important to proceed with extreme caution and to stay alert at all times," said the highway authority.

The military is also working to keep open the N2 highway, which links Cape Town to Durban. The highways are vital transport routes carrying fuel, food and other goods.

The rail line to the strategic Indian Ocean ports of Durban and Richard's Bay was also closed by the unrest, the stateowned transporta­tion company, Transnet said earlier this week.

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 ??  ?? Armed community members gather around a fire at a road block set up in Phoenix Township, North Durban to prevent looters from reaching the community
Armed community members gather around a fire at a road block set up in Phoenix Township, North Durban to prevent looters from reaching the community
 ??  ?? South African president Cyril Ramaphosa, visits an area in Durban badly affected by unrest
South African president Cyril Ramaphosa, visits an area in Durban badly affected by unrest

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