/ 19 July 2010

Zim sets up tents for nationals fleeing SA

Zimbabwe has set up temporary shelters for scores of its nationals leaving South Africa following threats of attacks on foreigners, an official said on Monday.

“We have put three big tents in Beitbridge, 10 000 blankets, 20 boxes of laundry soap and 1 000 buckets,” said Madzudzo Pawadyira, head of the government’s civil protection unit. Beitbridge is the main border crossing to South Africa.

“The same measures have also been put in place in Plumtree to cater for those returning through the Plumtree border” with Botswana, he added.

Scores of Zimbabweans working and living in South Africa are returning home after the Socer World Cup, with rumours of xenophobic violence swirling through poor neighbourhoods, he said.

“Indeed, there has been an increase of volume at Beitbridge, but this is not only confined to Zimbabweans, but this also includes other nationals from Zambia and Malawi,” Pawadyira said.

“Most of the people who were in South Africa are sending their children back home. Then you have those who are coming back because their usefulness in South Africa is no longer required.

“We have put up the contingency plans in partnership with United Nations agencies such as International Organisation for Migration, other non-governmental organisations such as Médecins Sans Frontières and World Vision.”

He sought to allay fears of a repeat of the 2008 xenophobic attacks that left 62 dead and thousands without homes when mobs of South Africans turned on foreign nationals they accused of taking scarce jobs.

“We have been assured by the South African authorities that they will stem out out these attacks on foreigners and this is quite encouraging,” Pawadyira said.

Somalian shot dead at Nyanga shop
A 19-year-old Somalian shop assistant was shot in the face and died in Nyanga on Monday morning, Western Cape police said.

Captain Ntomboxolo Sitshitshi said the young man had been confronted by two people who demanded he open the security gate to the tuckshop he worked at in Vlei Sweet Home Farms in the settlement outside Cape Town.

“While he was searching for the key the suspects fired a shot at him through the gate, fatally wounding him in the face.”

The two then ran away. Sitshitshi said the Somalian owner of the shop was not hurt.

Sitshitshi said it appeared the two just intended to rob the shop and the incident was not being treated as a case of xenophobia.

“Not at all, it was just a criminal element,” she said. – AFP, Sapa