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Xenophobia
given a red card in South Africa
IRIN
News
July
13, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=89816
Xenophobic violence
spiked in South Africa's Western Cape Province as the soccer world
cup ended in a blaze of fireworks, and although it appears to have
subsided, the fear of further attacks against foreign nationals
still lingers.
According to
media reports, "a number" of shops owned by foreign nationals
in townships close to Cape Town were razed and looted on 11 July,
and about 120 people sought refuge at police stations overnight
but had since left, Daniella Ebeneze, of the province's disaster
management department, told IRIN.
"The South
African Police ... have indicated that the situation is under control
and that they are maintaining a high visibility in the most vulnerable
areas," the Provincial Disaster Management Centre said in a
statement.
A Ghanaian man
was accosted and shot dead on 12 July in Gugulethu township, but
police would not comment on whether the killing was an act of xenophobia.
"Initial
reports suggest police responded quickly and well" to outbreaks
of xenophobic violence in the province, an approach that "addresses
the sense of impunity of [xenophobic] perpetrators," said Duncan
Breen, an advocacy officer for the Consortium for Refugees and Migrants
in South Africa, an NGO promoting and protecting the rights of refugees
and migrants.
Persistent rumours
circulated ahead of South Africa hosting the soccer world cup, saying
that after the final game there would be a reprise of the 2008 attacks
against foreign nationals, when about 62 people were killed and
more than 100,000 displaced.
The Forced Migration
Studies Programme (FMSP) at the University of the Witwatersrand
estimates there are about 1.6 to 2 million foreign-born residents
in South Africa, out of a population of 48 million. The FMSP estimates
that there are about 1.2 million Zimbabweans living in South Africa.
According to
a June 2010 FMSP policy
brief: "While [xenophobia is] not a direct cause of violence,
widespread anti-outsider sentiments serve as a resource for ethnic,
economic, and political entrepreneurs and criminals.
"Outsiders
can easily become scapegoats for economic hardship and are vulnerable
to robbery and attack because they lack documentation, often carry
cash due to banking barriers, and are less likely to have the support
of the general residents of the area," the policy briefing
said.
Quick
reaction by government
"The primary
difference [between 2008 and the present] is the greater preparedness
from government," Breen told IRIN, and civil society had also
taken a strong and vocal stand against xenophobia in recent months
to counter the widespread rumours of another large-scale attack.
An inter-ministerial
committee on xenophobia has been set up and ministers have warned
of "harsh action" against those attacking foreign nationals.
Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa and Defence Minister Lindiwe Sisulu
arrived in Western Cape Province on 12 July, the day after foreign-owned
shops were looted.
"Opportunistic
criminals must know that we will deal with them harshly; there is
no way we will allow them to spread fear and crime. We are working
very hard to find them and prosecute them," Sisulu said on
arrival in the province.
Catherine Schulze,
spokesperson for the South African Institute of Race Relations,
a think-tank, said in a statement that there was not enough information
to accurately predict a recurrence of violence similar to that directed
against foreigners in 2008, but the conditions that had prompted
it were "largely unchanged".
"Poverty,
unemployment, and incomes indicators have not shifted significantly
since 2008, while high levels of crime and violence are an everyday
reality in many poor communities. At the same time, reports of increased
threats, some disguised as jokes and idle banter, have created an
enabling environment for a renewed series of attacks," the
statement said.
Bishop Paul
Verryn, of the Methodist church, told local media that threats had
been made against him and foreign nationals staying at the Central
Methodist Church in the Johannesburg CBD.
The church has
provided refuge to thousands of destitute Zimbabwean migrants arriving
in South Africa in recent years. "The metro police came [to
the church] and said they would be coming for the people,"
Verryn told the local media.
"People
are returning to Zimbabwe in large numbers," a humanitarian
worker in Musina, a town near South Africa's border with Zimbabwe,
told IRIN. Families as well as lone migrants said they were moving
in response to the threats of xenophobia. "They told me they
don't want something to happen to them, or experience something
[xenophobia] again."
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