South Africa to deploy army to end anti-immigrant attacks
South
Africa will deploy the army to areas that remain volatile after a spate of
violent attacks targeting immigrants, the defense minister announced on
Tuesday.
Soldiers
will be sent to support police in troubled areas, Defense Minister Nosiviwe
Mapisa-Nqakula said in a live broadcast.
The
minister made the announcement in Alexandra, a Johannesburg township where a
Zimbabwean couple survived a shooting overnight. Both Zimbabweans were treated
and discharged from hospital.
In
the same Alexandra area, a Mozambican man was stabbed to death by four South
African men over the weekend. Four South African suspects appeared in court on
Tuesday and remain in jail, said Velekhaya Mgobhozi, the National Prosecuting
Authority spokesman.
Troops
will also be sent to Durban, the coastal city where the attacks on foreigners
began, Mapisa-Nqakula said. The violence has been concentrated in areas of
Johannesburg and Durban where poor immigrants and South Africans live.
By
nightfall Tuesday, no troops were seen in Alexandra in Johannesburg.
The
violence has forced nearly 7,000 immigrants into camps around Durban, Doctors
Without Borders said in a statement. Camps have also been set up in
Johannesburg. The recent spate of attacks has mainly affected immigrants from
African
states like Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, said the statement.
In
Malawi, nearly 2,000 protesters marched to
the South African High Commission, demonstrating against the wave of violence,
said Billy Mayaya, a human rights activist.
"South
Africa, why kill your fellow blacks?'' read one poster carried by the singing
demonstrators in the capital Lilongwe. The march organizers called on the South
African government to do more to protect immigrants.
Nearly
400 Malawians returned home on Monday, traveling overnight by bus from South
Africa, Malawi's Information Minister Kondwani Nankhumwa said.
In
neighboring Mozambique, more than 100 Mozambicans have returned from South
Africa, the Mozambican Ambassador to South Africa, Fernando Fazenda, said.
Mozambican
President Filipe Nyusi asked Mozambicans not to retaliate by attacking South
Africans living in the country or South African businesses operating there.
No comments:
Post a Comment