Countries neighboring South Africa on Friday prepared to evacuate their citizens from South Africa as the UN raised an alarm over deadly xenophobic attacks which have displaced thousands.
The antiforeigner violence, which erupted in the eastern port city of Durban, has left at least six people dead and spread to the economic hub, Johannesburg.
“In South Africa, xenophobic attacks over the last three weeks have ... displaced over 5,000 foreign nationals,” the UN Refugee Agency said, adding it was “extremely concerned.”
Photo: Reuters
“We would like to underscore that those affected in these xenophobic attacks are refugees and asylum seekers who were forced to leave their countries due to war and persecution,” the agency said.
Foreigners who had fled their homes were sheltering in makeshift camps.
Neighboring Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique announced plans to evacuate their citizens, as the violence drew regional outrage.
Zimbabwean Ambassador to South Africa Isaac Moyo said the repatriation of about 1,000 Zimbabweans from Durban would start today.
In Harare, demonstrators marched to the South African embassy to condemn what they called the “senseless and gruesome slaughter” of fellow Africans.
In Mozambique, a group of about 200 on Friday blockaded the southern Lebombo border with South Africa, stoning South African vehicles.
“The demonstrators blocked the road for half an hour, refusing to allow cars with South African registration plates to pass,” Moamba District police commander Alfonso Rocco told reporters.
In Zambia, a privately owned radio station has stopped playing South African music in protest over the attacks.
“Radio QFM has blacked out the playing of South African music effective today, April 17th, in protest against xenophobic attacks on foreign nationals taking place in that country,” QFM managing director Asan Nyama said in a statement posted on the station’s Web site.
South African singer Kelly Khumalo was forced to postpone performances in London because of outrage, while Big Nuz — a group that plays the popular Kwaito dance music genre — had to cancel a concert in Zimbabwe, South African Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe said on Friday.
The anger in neighboring countries was exacerbated by the fact that they hosted thousands of South African exiles during the struggle against apartheid — a point that South African President Jacob Zuma raised in a speech to parliament on Thursday.
“We were treated with generosity, dignity and respect by our brothers and sisters on the rest of the continent,” Zuma said, adding that their solidarity was “critical to achievement of freedom and democracy we are enjoying today.”
The latest violence has been largely blamed on a speech last month by Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini in which he blamed foreigners for South Africa’s high crime rate and said they must “take their bags and go.”
The king has since said his words were misinterpreted, but for some, Zwelithini simply articulated what many were feeling.
South Africa’s relatively sophisticated economy attracts African immigrants, but massive inequalities and high unemployment among locals breed resentment against them.
“We believe that the cause of the xenophobic attacks is policy failure by the government,” said Mienke Mary Steytler, of the South African Institute of Race Relations. “High unemployment and inequality are not being tackled.”
The Economic Community of West African States condemned the “barbaric, criminal and xenophobic murder of innocent foreigners,” calling on the South African government to quickly end the violence.
This is not the first wave of antiforeigner violence in South Africa. In January, foreign shopkeepers in and around the vast township of Soweto, south of Johannesburg, were forced to flee, and six were killed as looters rampaged through the area.
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