Video na Makala: Raisi Ramaphosa alaani vitendo vya vurugu dhidi ya wageni (xenophobic attacks) Afrika Kusini
South Africa's President Ramaphosa condemns 'anti-foreigner violence' on 4th September, 2019
"There can be no justification for any South African to
attack people from other countries," he said on Tuesday.
Dozens of people were arrested in Johannesburg on Monday. At
least five people have been killed in the unrest.
Other African governments have issued warnings to their citizens
over the violence.
Attacks on businesses run by "foreign nationals is
something totally unacceptable, something that we cannot allow to happen in
South Africa," Mr Ramaphosa said in a video posted to Twitter.
"I want it to stop immediately," he added.
Separately, the African Union (AU) issued a statement condemning
the "despicable acts" of violence "in the strongest terms".
Police fired tear gas, rubber bullets and stun grenades in an
attempt to quell the unrest on Monday. The surge in violence also saw mobs loot
shops, torch vehicles, and target lorries that were being driven by foreign
nationals.
Violence continued on Tuesday in Johannesburg's Alexandra
township.
Some angry residents in the city are calling on the government
to deport undocumented migrants, the BBC's Nomsa Maseko says.
But one Nigerian businessman, whose shop was targeted by
looters, told the BBC that foreign nationals in South Africa were subjected to
"a lot of allegations [and] lies".
"This is not a criminal attack. This is a [xenophobic]
attack," he said.
A branch of the South African supermarket Shoprite has been
vandalised in the Lagos neighbourhood of Lekki, an eyewitness has told the BBC.
One eyewitness reported seeing two bodies lying on the road
outside the shopping centre where the supermarket is based.
Cars stuck in nearby traffic were also vandalised as their
passengers fled. The authorities have not confirmed the reports of casualties.
What has the reaction been?
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari sent an envoy to South
Africa on Tuesday to "express Nigeria's displeasure over the treatment of
her citizens".
In a statement, the country's high commission in South Africa
described the situation as "anarchy". The government alleges that
Nigerian-owned businesses were targeted in Johannesburg and it has called on
Nigerians to come forward to report what has happened to them.
Ethiopia's embassy in South Africa has advised its citizens to
close their businesses during the ongoing tension, according to Ethiopia's
state-linked Fana Broadcasting Corporate (FBC).
It also says that Ethiopians are advised to "distance
themselves from any confrontation and conflict" and not go out wearing
expensive jewellery.
some places, police have
confronted those trying to loot
Meanwhile, Zambia's transport
ministry has said that lorry drivers should "avoid travelling to South
Africa until the security situation improves". The statement refers to
reported attacks on foreign lorry drivers. The South African IOL news site says
that there have been "numerous incidents" of vehicles being looted.
But South Africa's police
minister, Bheki Cele, said on Monday that "criminality rather than
xenophobia" was to blame for the "senseless violence". "[Xenophobia]
is used as an excuse," he told reporters after visiting Johannesburg's
Central Business District, where much of the unrest has been taking place.
"Nothing... has sparked any form of conflict between the South Africans
and foreign nationals."
This isn't the first time the country has been rocked by
anti-foreigner violence.
In 2015 xenophobic attacks became so bad that a sports field
south of Durban was made into a makeshift refugee camp for Africans escaping
the violent looters:
Media captionIn 2015, Milton
Nkosi reported on the deaths of several people during attacks on migrants in
South Africa
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