Foreigners have been arming themselves after coming under
attack
|
At least five foreigners, including a 14-year-old boy, have
been killed in attacks in South Africa's coastal city of Durban since last
week.
Some foreign-owned shops in the main city Johannesburg have
shut amid fears that the violence could spread.
Zimbabwe has also condemned the attacks, blamed on locals
who accuse foreigners of taking their jobs.
Tens of thousands of foreigners, mostly from other African
states and Asia, have moved to South Africa since white-minority rule ended in 1994.
The government has ordered police to step up efforts to
protect foreigners
|
Malawi is the only country which has so far decided to
repatriate its citizens.
Information Minister Kondwani Nankhumwa said the first group
would return at the weekend.
About 420 Malawians are reportedly living in refugee camps
in Durban after fleeing the violence, he said.
The BBC's Raphael Tenthani reports from Blantyre that he
received a call from a Malawian in Durban who said he saw some Malawians being
killed - including a close friend who was burned alive.
Local gangs accuse foreigners of taking their jobs
|
Foreigners have shut their shops in Johannesburg to prevent
looting
|
Mr Nankhumwa called on the African Union (AU) and the
Southern African Development Community (Sadc) to intervene to help protect
foreigners.
"This is unfortunate coming at a time we are working on
regional integration," he said at a press conference.
"We urge the government of South Africa to protect
foreigners," he added.
Standing in the middle of a football field that has been
turned into a refugee camp overnight in Durban's Chatsworth township, one
cannot help but feel ashamed of being South African.
There are white and green tents dotted around housing
destitute African migrant families who fled the violence meted out to them by
their South African hosts.
Two weeks ago locals began attacking and looting properties
owned by fellow Africans, calling them "kwerekwere", a derogatory
word for African migrants.
I did not even have to ask Memory Mahlatini, a Zimbabwean
who works as a nanny, what happened to her because her story was written all
over her face.
Her eyes alone made me look down in shame as she explained
how a group of South Africans came to her rented home last Monday evening just
as they were preparing to sleep and demanded that they go back to where they
came from.
In total, the violence has left about 5,000 foreigners
homeless in Durban, the main city in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province,
local media reports.
On Wednesday, the violence spread to the province's second
city, Pietermaritzburg, where foreign-owned shops were looted.
Verulam, a town about 30km (18 miles) north of Durban, has
been hit by similar violence.
The government has ordered police to step up patrols to
prevent the violence from escalating.
The governing African National Congress (ANC) said in a
statement that South Africans should "hang our heads in shame in the face
of these misguided and misplaced assaults".
Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini has been accused of fuelling
xenophobia after he was widely quoted as saying at a meeting last month that
foreigners should "please go back to their countries".
He denied being xenophobic and claimed he had been
mistranslated.
South Africa's official unemployment rate stands at 24%, but
some analysts believe that it is much higher.
Source: BBC
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