A foreign shopkeeper was badly
burned in a petrol bomb attack in South Africa's Soweto township, police said
Friday, in the latest outbreak of xenophobic violence which has killed at least
six people. Nine people have been arrested and
charged with public violence and attempted murder over the attack on Thursday
night, which came as local traders ordered foreigners to shut up shop.
"Foreigners were instructed to
close their shops by a group of people driving in a convoy around the
township," said police spokesperson Kay Makhubela.
"They were not members of the
community but business people from Soweto and Kagiso."
The foreign shopkeeper, whose
nationality was not revealed, was "seriously harmed" in the attack
and was in a "critical but stable condition", Makhubela said.
Violence against foreign business
owners in South African townships -- many of them Somalis -- has seen at least
80 shops looted in the past month, with more than 200 people arrested for theft
and public violence.
Police and local government
authorities insist that the looting is not driven by xenophobia but is simply
opportunistic criminal activity.
However, reports show that the only
businesses being looted and business owners being attacked are foreign
nationals.
Many South African owners of the
small general stores common in South Africa's townships complain that
foreigners undercut prices and push locals out of business.
With poverty and unemployment
widespread, frustration in Johannesburg's run-down neighbourhoods often boils
over into anti-immigrant violence.
The violence has been condemned by
rights groups and politicians, with President Jacob Zuma urging the police to
restore order.
But many foreign business owners
have fled, leaving their shops standing empty.
Amin Ahme, 23, who worked at a shop
in Soweto told AFP: "We can't go back right now, because even yesterday
they started looting other shops in a lot of locations, so we are still
scared."
In 2008, xenophobic violence and
looting killed 62 people in Johannesburg townships.
No comments:
Post a Comment