South
African police on Friday arrested 136 suspects in connection with their
involvement in the xenophobia mayhem unleashed on immigrants in Pretoria.
The arrests
followed a fresh wave of xenophobic attacks in Gauteng Province heightened by
an anti-immigrants march held in Pretoria on Friday.
The march
saw numerous shops around the city centre closed, with customers still locked
inside.
The 15km
march left a trail of destruction when marchers struck makeshift shelters of a
religious group camping outside the Tshwane Events Centre.
Police fired
rubber bullets to try and disperse protesters as well as the large number of
foreign nationals who gathered together for safety.
Acting
National Police Commissioner Kgomotso Phahlane said they had stepped in and the
situation in Pretoria was now calm and under control.
Officers
found a 5 litre container filled with petrol as well as clothes on one of the
suspects.
Lt. Gen. l
Phahlane said: “136 people have been arrested over 24 hours but we are unable
to confirm how many of those arrested are South African and how many aren’t. We
cannot allow situation to be overwhelmed by crowd. We use proportional force.”
A man was
shot with rubber bullets when he got caught in the crossfire between police and
protesters during the anti-foreigner march.
Mr Sello
Tshatswayo said he was trying to stop a taxi to go home from school in the
Pretoria CBD.
“They just
started shooting, we were in a group and we all just ran in different
directions,” Mr Tshatswayo said.
Fears were
mounting among residents that the clashes could spill into the weekend.
“It was
really scary with lots of police in our area and choppers over Pretoria west.
This can’t be right, we can’t live in fear like this. Authorities need to deal
with it otherwise it will continue throughout the weekend,” said Ms Hlengiwe
Mabhena, an Atteridgeville resident.
“It was bad
in the morning because anybody who was not part of the march was becoming a
target. They even uprooted trees and damaged highways’ side barriers‚” another
resident, Mr Bonnie Molefe, said.
Tshwane
Mayor Solly Msimanga said the anti-immigrant sentiments have no place in our
society.
“The issue
of rising unemployment requires all our collective efforts to turn this tide
around. Tshwane, like other urban centres around the globe is faced with an
urgent need to address the increasing rate of urbanisation and create more work
opportunities,” he said.
(NAN)
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thank you stephanie
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