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Somalis Face Anti-Immigrant Attacks In S.Africa

AR Articles on South Africa
Afrikaner Survival Under Black Rule (May 2004)
Black Empowerment (Mar. 2003)
South Africa, 1999 (Aug. 1999)
South Africa under Black Rule (Jul. 1998)
Search AmRen.com for South Africa
More news stories on South Africa
Gordon Bell, Reuters, September 1, 2006

Somalis Face Anti-Immigrant Attacks In S.Africa
http://za.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-09-01T125640Z_01_BAN146482_RTRIDST_0_OZATP-SAFRICA-SOMALIS-20060901.XML&archived=False
Gordon Bell, Reuters, September 1, 2006

Cape Town—A group of Somali children laugh and play on a secluded field outside Cape Town, oblivious to the hatred and violence that have driven their parents from their homes and businesses.

Police said on Friday a South African mob attacked Somali refugees this week in Masiphumelele, a tiny black township near the quiet seaside town of Kommetjie, about 40 km (25 miles) south of the country’s tourist hub, looting and torching shops and forcing scores into hiding.

Analysts say widespread poverty and a large African immigrant population has bred jealously, making Africa’s biggest economy rife for xenophobia.

Tens of thousands of illegal immigrants, jostling for limited jobs and adding to already high crime rates, have sparked distrust and hatred of legitimate refugees.

Attacks against Somalis have occurred across South Africa over the past six months and in the Cape Town region 27 citizens of the war-ravaged Horn of Africa nation have been murdered in the last month alone, according to police figures.

“There is fear amongst the Somali people living in this country,” 26-year-old Madith Haji Adam told Reuters, as a handful of children play ball on a campsite field nearby.

“Our property has been destroyed and our businesses are gone. Everybody is desperate, just waiting to see what will happen next,” he said, his grasp of English making him a spokesman for his fellow countrymen clamouring to be heard.

{snip}

The latest attacks have been directed at township “spaza” shops—small stores selling soft drinks and snacks or clothes—in which Somali businesspeople have flourished.

Local residents blame them for loss of trade, and dwindling profits, provoking mob violence and gangster-type hits.

More than a decade after the end of apartheid, the vast majority of South Africa’s black population remains desperately poor, accounting for the bulk of the country’s almost 30 percent official unemployment.

“Desperate people do desperate things,” said Frans Cronje, analyst at the South African Institute for Race Relations. “We have seen this happen elsewhere. Foreign black Africans are targeted mainly when they are living in black communities.”

Cronje said the issues are usually the same: “That they are stealing jobs from South Africans, they are stealing services from South Africans and that they are stealing South African women.”

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on September 1, 2006)

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