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Xenophobia in South Africa

Prior to 1994, immigrants from elsewhere faced discrimination and even violence in South Africa due competition for scarce economic opportunities. After majority rule in 1994, contrary to expectations, the incidence of xenophobia increased.[1] Between 2000 and March 2008, at least 7 people died in what were identified as xenophobic attacks. In May 2008, a series of attacks left 12 people dead; although 10 of those killed were South African citizens.[2] The attacks were partly motivated by xenophobia.[3] In 2015, another nationwide spike in xenophobic attacks against immigrants in general prompted a number of foreign governments to begin repatriating their citizens.[4] A Pew Research poll conducted in 2018 showed that 62% of South Africans viewed immigrants as a burden on society by taking jobs and social benefits and that 61% of South Africans thought that immigrants were more responsible for crime than other groups.[5] Based on various police reports 60% of suspects arrested for violent crimes in Gauteng South Africa are illegal immigrants, between 2015 and 2016.[6] The number of foreign nationals who have been arrested by the Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department (JMPD) between 2016 and 2019 sit at 7841.[7] Between 2010 and 2017 the illegal immigrant community in South Africa increased from 2 million people to 4 million people.[5] The proportion of South Africa's total population that is foreign born increased from 2.8% in 2005 to 7% in 2019, according to the United Nations International Organization for Migration,[8] in spite of widespread xenophobia in the country.[9] This made South Africa the largest recipient of immigrants on the African continent in 2019.[8]

South Africa Johannesburg Metropolitan Gauteng Province criminal foreign nationals' arrests 2016-to-2019 statistics[10].

Xenophobia in South Africa before 1994 edit

Attacks against Mozambican and Congolese immigrants edit

Between 1984 and the end of hostilities in that country, an estimated 50,000 to 350,000 Mozambicans fled to South Africa. While never granted refugee status they were technically allowed to settle in the bantustans or black homelands created during the apartheid system. The reality was more varied, with the homeland of Lebowa banning Mozambican settlers outright while Gazankulu welcomed the refugees with support in the form of land and equipment. Those in Gazankulu, however, found themselves confined to the homeland and liable for deportation should they officially enter South Africa, and evidence exists that their hosts denied them access to economic resources.[11]

Unrest and civil war likewise saw large numbers of Congolese people emigrate to South Africa, many illegally, in 1993 and 1997. Subsequent studies found indications of xenophobic attitudes towards these refugees, typified by them being denied access to the primary healthcare to which they were technically entitled.[11]

Xenophobia in South Africa after 1994 edit

Despite a lack of directly comparable data, xenophobia in South Africa is perceived to have significantly increased after the election of a Black majority government in 1994.[12] According to a 2004 study published by the Southern African Migration Project (SAMP):

The ANC government – in its attempts to overcome the divides of the past and build new forms of social cohesion ... embarked on an aggressive and inclusive nation-building project. One unanticipated by-product of this project has been a growth in intolerance towards outsiders ... Violence against foreign citizens and African refugees has become increasingly common and communities are divided by hostility and suspicion.[13]

The study was based on a citizen survey across member states of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and found South Africans expressing the harshest anti-immigrant sentiment, with 21% of South Africans in favour of a complete ban on foreign entry and 64% in favour of strict limitations on the numbers permitted. By contrast, the next-highest proportion of respondents in favour of a complete ban on immigration were in neighbouring Namibia, and Botswana, at 10%.

Foreigners and the South African Police Service edit

 
Burundian refugee afraid of re-integration into South African society living rough, 2009

A 2004 study by the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation (CSVR) of attitudes amongst police officers in the Johannesburg area found that 87% of respondents believed that most undocumented immigrants in Johannesburg are involved in crime, despite there being no statistical evidence to substantiate the perception. Such views combined with the vulnerability of illegal aliens led to abuse, including violence and extortion, some analysts argued.[14]

In a March 2007 meeting with Home Affairs Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, a representative of Burundian refugees in Durban claimed that immigrants could not rely on police for protection, but instead found police mistreating them, stealing from them and making unconfirmed allegations that they sell drugs.[15] Two years earlier, at a similar meeting in Johannesburg, Mapisa-Nqakula had admitted that refugees and asylum seekers were mistreated by police with xenophobic attitudes.[16]

Violence before May 2008 edit

According to a 1998 Human Rights Watch report, immigrants from Malawi, Zimbabwe and Mozambique living in the Alexandra township were "physically assaulted over a period of several weeks in January 1995, as armed gangs identified suspected undocumented migrants and marched them to the police station in an attempt to 'clean' the township of foreigners."[17][18] The campaign, known as "Buyelekhaya" (go back home), blamed foreigners for crime, unemployment and sexual attacks.[19]

In September 1998, a Mozambican national and two Senegalese citizens were thrown out of a train. The assault was carried out by a group returning from a rally that blamed foreigners for unemployment, crime and the spread of AIDS.[20]

In 2000, seven foreigners were killed on the Cape Flats over a five-week period in what police described as xenophobic murders possibly motivated by the fear that outsiders would claim property belonging to locals.[21]

In October 2001, residents of the Zandspruit informal settlement gave Zimbabwean citizens ten days to leave the area. When the foreigners failed to leave voluntarily, they were forcefully evicted and their shacks were burned down and looted. Community members said they were angry that Zimbabweans were employed whilst locals remained jobless and blamed the foreigners for a number of crimes. No injuries were reported amongst the affected Zimbabweans.[22]

In the last week of 2005 and first week of 2006, at least four people, including two Zimbabweans, died in the Olievenhoutbosch settlement after foreigners were blamed for the death of a local man. Shacks belonging to foreigners were set alight and locals demanded that police remove all immigrants from the area.[23]

In August 2006, Somali refugees appealed for protection after 21 Somali traders were killed in July of that year and 26 more in August. The immigrants believed the murders to be motivated by xenophobia, although police rejected the assertion of a concerted campaign to drive Somali traders out of townships in the Western Cape.[24]

Attacks on foreign nationals increased markedly in late-2007[12] and it is believed that there were at least a dozen attacks between January and May 2008.[25] The most severe incidents occurred on 8 January 2008 when two Somali shop owners were murdered in the Eastern Cape towns of Jeffreys Bay and East London, then in March 2008 when seven people were killed including Zimbabweans, Pakistanis and a Somali national after their shops and shacks were set alight in Atteridgeville near Pretoria.[25]

May 2008 riots edit

2008 South Africa riots
Part of the history of South Africa
 
Map of South Africa
DateMay 2008
Location
Result 62 people dead,[26] several hundred injured, voluntary deportation of immigrants to home countries, destruction of immigrant-owned property

On 12 May 2008 a series of riots started in the township of Alexandra (in the north-eastern part of Johannesburg) when locals attacked migrants from Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe, killing two people and injuring 40 others.[12][27] Some attackers were reported to have been singing Jacob Zuma's campaign song Umshini Wami (Zulu: "Bring Me My Machine Gun").[28] In the following weeks the violence spread, first to other settlements in the Gauteng Province, then to the coastal cities of Durban[29] and Cape Town.[12] Attacks were also reported in parts of the Southern Cape,[30]Mpumalanga,[31] the North West and Free State.[32]

By the end of the riots 62 people were reported dead.[33] 1400 suspects were arrested in connection with the violence. Nine months after the attacks 128 individuals had been convicted and 30 found not guilty in 105 concluded court cases. 208 cases had been withdrawn and 156 were still being heard.[34] One year after the attacks prosecutors said that 137 people had been convicted, 182 cases had been withdrawn because witnesses or complainants had left the country, 51 cases were underway or ready for trial and 82 had been referred for further investigation.[35]

In May 2009, one year after the attacks the Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa (Cormsa) said that foreigners remained under threat of violence and that little had been done to address the causes of the attacks. The organisation complained of a lack of accountability for those responsible for public violence, insufficient investigations into the instigators and the lack of a public government inquiry.[36]

2009–12 edit

 
Anti-xenophobia walk on Mandela Day 2010, Cape Town

In late May 2009, reports emerged regarding a possible resurgence of xenophobic related activity and the organising of attacks in the Western Cape. Reports of threats and secret meetings by local businessmen surfaced in Gugulethu, Khayelitsha and Philippi, Cape Town. Samora Machel in Philippi once again emerging as a flash-point.[37] In Gugulethu, reports emerged of secret meetings by local businessmen discussing 'what to do about Somali shopkeepers'. The Anti-Eviction Campaign brought these issues to the open by organising a series of anti-xenophobia meetings attempting to find the root cause of the crisis.[38][39]

In November 2009, a community of 1500-2500 Zimbabwean farm workers was forcibly evicted from their homes in the informal settlements of De Doorns, a grape-farming town in the Western Cape. No persons were physically assaulted but homes were trashed and looted and this led to the biggest displacement of foreign nationals since May 2008. The Zimbabweans were then housed in a displaced persons' camp where some remained for a year until it was closed. Researchers identified the role of a ward councillor, Mpumelelo Lubisi, in inciting the attack in possible collusion with informal labour brokers who had financial interests in getting rid of their Zimbabwean competitors. South African workers also accused farmers of employing the Zimbabweans at less than minimum wage (farmers and Zimbabwean workers denied this).[40]

In 2010 the press carried numerous articles claiming that there would be massive planned xenophobic violence at the end of the 2010 Football World Cup. However this did not happen.[41]

In July 2012 there were new attacks in parts of Cape Town and in Botshabelo in the Free State.[42]

"Fortress South Africa" edit

South Africa's borders were re-militarised. According to Christopher McMichael:

"This shared state-corporate project of building up a 'fortress South Africa' also reveals a deeply entrenched seam of xenophobia, in which undocumented migrants and refugees from African countries are painted as a security risk akin to terrorism and organised crime. Parliamentary discussions on border security are rife with claims that foreign nationals are attempting to drain social grants and economic opportunities from citizens. The packaging of illegal immigration as a national security threat, which often relies on unsubstantiated claims about the inherent criminality of foreign nationals, provides an official gloss on deeply entrenched governmental xenophobia, in which African immigrants are targets for regular harassment, rounding up and extortion by the police. This normalisation of immigrants as figures of resentment may also fuel outbreaks of xenophobic violence."[43]

2013–19 edit

Attacks against Somali entrepreneurs edit

 
Anti-xenophobia poster, Harold Cressy High School, Cape Town 2014

On 30 May 2013, 25-year-old Abdi Nasir Mahmoud Good, was stoned to death. The violence was captured on a mobile phone and shared on the Internet.[44]

Three Somali shopkeepers had been killed in June 2013 and the Somali government requested the South African authorities to do more to protect their nationals. Among those murdered were two brothers who were allegedly hacked to death.[45] The attacks led to public outcry and worldwide protests by the Somali diaspora, in Cape Town,[46] London[47] and Minneapolis.[48]

South African Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane expressed the government's "strongest condemnation" of the violence which had seen looting and the death of a Somali shopkeeper.[46] Somali Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon expressed concern for the safety of Somalis in South Africa, calling on the government there to intervene to stop violence against Somali people after deadly attacks in Pretoria and Port Elizabeth.[49]

On 7 June 2014, a Somali national, in his 50s, was reportedly stoned to death and two others were seriously injured when the angry mob of locals attacked their shop in extension 6, late on Saturday. Three more Somalis were wounded from gunshots and shops were looted.[50]

After another round of xenophobic violence against Somali entrepreneurs in April 2015, Somalia's government announced that it would evacuate its citizens from South Africa.[51]

April 2015 attacks edit

 
March against xenophobia, Johannesburg, 23 April 2015

In April 2015, there was an upsurge in xenophobic attacks throughout the country. The attacks started in Durban and spread to Johannesburg. Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini was accused of aggravating the attacks by saying that foreigners should "go back to their countries".[4][52] Moreover, foreigners, being a minority group with hardly any political muscle,they were an easy target of "the majority of black working class citizens."[53]

Locals looted foreigners' shops and attacked immigrants in general, forcing hundreds to relocate to police stations across the country. The Malawian authorities subsequently began repatriating their nationals, and a number of other foreign governments also announced that they would evacuate their citizens.[4] More than 300 people were arrested.[52] On 18 April 2015, a photographer from the Sunday Times, James Oatway, photographed a brutal attack on a Mozambican man. The man, Emmanuel Sithole, died from his wounds.[54] Four suspects were arrested within days of the publication of photographs in the edition of 19 April of The Sunday Times of the murder of Mozambican street vendor Emmanuel Sithole in Alexandra township the previous day.[55][56][57] Sithole's name was not included in the official list of seven victims killed in the April 2015 attacks, including an Ethiopian, a Mozambican, a Bangladeshi, a Zimbabwean and three South Africans who were all killed in KwaZulu-Natal.[58]

Despite the government's insistence that Sithole's murder was not xenophobic, the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) was deployed in Alexandra township following the publication of the images.[59] On 23 April several thousand demonstrators marched through central Johannesburg to protest against a spate of deadly attacks on immigrants. They sang songs denouncing xenophobia and carried banners that read "We are all Africans" as migrant workers crowded balconies, shouting their support.[60]

October 2015 attacks edit

In October 2015 there were sustained xenophobic attacks in Grahamstown in the Eastern Cape. It as reported that more than 500 people were displaced and more than 300 shops and homes looted and, in some cases, destroyed altogether. In these attacks Muslims were specifically targeted.[61][62][63][64][65]

The Grahamstown xenophobic attacks that took place on 21 October 2015, and coincided with the FeesMustFall protest at Rhodes University, lasted for several days.

The attacks were instigated by the taxi drivers' protests, where the drivers' were protesting over the terrible state of roads, the rise in crime and rumours of murders committed by foreigners. Their demands were that the mayor ought to do something about their grievances. Their grievances were not addressed by the mayor.

On 21 October 2015 taxi drivers attacked spaza shops owned by Pakistani, Somali, Bangladeshi and Ethiopian residents of Grahamstown. There was a mobilisation of people by the taxi drivers, with the aim of attacking and looting shops owned by foreigners.[66] There was a rumour that insinuated that foreigners were responsible for the rampant murders in town: that an "Arab man had killed and mutilated women" around town and that the police had not done anything to address these rumours. Grahamstown residents in the townships were angry at the police for not doing anything to dispel the rumours, despite having been warned by the councillors that the residents might end up taking the law into their own hands. Thus, it was these rumours that incited the attacks on foreigners.

On 23 October, the Makana Municipality held a town meeting at City Hall. The meeting was focused on how the municipality and the South African police would pacify the residents and address the situation. During that meeting, there was no representative from the police and one of the ward councillors further legitimized the attacks through xenophobic sentiments centred on not giving foreigners a platform to have their own shops.[67] The attacks continued, with taxi drivers transporting looters for free, according to the residents of Grahamstown.[68]

Reports from the residents alleged that the police's attitudes were that of indifference, with some participating in the looting.[68] The policing of the attacks was elitist as there was a line on Beaufort street which pointed out where looting would be tolerated and where it would not be. Thus, looting was allowed in the township and not tolerated in town.[68] The police only pacified the situation and restored order after a week of attacks and looting. The xenophobic attacks in Grahamstown differed from the usual xenophobic attacks in South Africa as the ones in Grahamstown were mostly targeted at Muslims. The main reason why Muslims were targeted was mainly due to the rumour that an Arab man was responsible for the murder of women in the town.

2016 Tshwane riots edit

From 20–23 June 2016 a wave of riots hit the City of Tshwane. Although the riots were sparked by political discontent within the ANC,[69] Somali,[70] Pakistani[71] and other foreign owned shops and micro enterprises were targeted for looting[72] and a number of foreigners were attacked.[70]

2017 Anti-immigration Protest edit

On Friday 24 February 2017 a large scale and officially sanctioned anti-immigrant protest was organised and held in the Pretoria. Protesters marched to the Foreign Ministry and handed a petition to government representatives. Protesters accused immigrants of taking jobs from South Africans, causing crime,[73] and complained that "[t]hey are arrogant and they don't know how to talk to people, especially Nigerians."[74] 136 protesters were arrested during the march.[74]

2019 Durban riots edit

On 25 March 2019 xenophobic riots targeting African immigrants broke out in Sydenham, Jadhu Place and Overport areas of Durban.[75][76] Around one hundred people attacked businesses owned by foreign nationals resulting in around 50 people seeking shelter in a local police station and mosque.[77] Three people were killed in the riot.[77] A speech given by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the ANC's election manifesto for the 2019 South African general election was blamed for contributing to xenophobic feeling wherein Ramaphosa committed to cracking down on undocumented foreigners involved in criminal activities.[76] The attacks on foreigners was criticised by both the South African government[77] and political parties[75] amidst calls to ensure that xenophobic sentiment was not exploited for electoral purposes.[78]

2019 Johannesburg riots edit

On 1 September 2019, riots and looting targeting shops owned by foreign nationals broke out in Jeppestown and Johannesburg CBD[79] following the death of a taxi driver.[80] By 3 September, police had made 189 arrests for looting.[81] Around 50 businesses predominantly owned by Nigerians[citation needed] from the rest of the continent were reportedly destroyed or damaged during the incident.[82] The riots coincided with a nationwide truck driver strike protesting against the employment of non-South African truckers.[83] After riots resulted in 12 deaths in the first week of September, 640 of an estimated 100,000 Nigerians in South Africa signed up to take free flights offered by Nigeria to return to their home country.[84][85] The riots led to a sit-in protest in Greenmarket Square, Cape Town by refugees demanding to be relocated to a third country outside of South Africa and other than their country of origin.[86][87]

2020–present edit

Reports of xenophobic attacks targeting foreign truck drivers[88] and other foreigners[89] were recorded during the 2021 South African unrest.

Operation Dudula edit

Reports of harassment of immigrant traders in Soweto and Johannesburg by a group dubbed "Operation Dudula" (meaning: "to push" in isiZulu) began emerging in mid-January 2022.[90] This was preceded by a social media campaign in June 2020 calling for action against immigrants under the Operation Dudula banner.[90] The Tsietsi Mashinini Centre in Soweto, a known refuge for refugees and foreign nationals, was raided by supporters of Operation Dudula on 6 February 2022.[91][92] On 12 and 13 February 2022 residents of Soweto and Alexandra marched to Hillbrow and Orange Grove under the Operation Dudula banner to forcibly remove foreigners claiming that undocumented foreign nationals were responsible for rising levels of crimes and immoral activity such as drug dealing and prostitution.[93][94][95] High rates of unemployment and lack of economic opportunities for South African nationals were also cited as grievances by the group.[96] Police forcibly dispersed the Operation Dudula marchers which resulted in clashes between the two groups.[96] Representatives of Operation Dudula denied that their movement was xenophobic despite their stated aim to unilaterally forcibly evict illegal foreigners from South Africa.[97]

Dudula Movement edit

The Dudula Movement, a similar although unrelated movement to Operation Dudula, emerged around the same time in Alexandra, Johannesburg.[98][99] Acting as a vigilante organisation it targets foreign nationals its members believe to be undocumented.[99][98] They deny targeting only black undocumented foreigners but undocumented foreigners of all races and national origins.[99] Members of the movement have expressed grievances with lawlessness, unemployment, and a lack of economic opportunities as reasons for joining.[98]

Reactions edit

South African Small Business Development Minister Lindiwe Zulu said that foreign business owners cannot expect to co-exist peacefully with local business owners unless they share their trade secrets. According to Zulu, foreign business owners had an advantage over South African business owners due to marginalisation under apartheid. "They cannot barricade themselves in and not share their practices with local business owners," Zulu said.[100] The comments were met with widespread criticism.[101][102][103]

An inquiry by the Competition Commission – the country's anti-trust regulator, has indicated that a difference in performance between foreign and local business owners has created a perception that foreigners are more successful than locals. While there is nothing wrong with examining the dynamics of competition, the insinuation that foreign business owners were to blame for the decline of South African-owned small business was worrying.[104]

Vanya Gastrow, a researcher from the African Centre for Migration in Johannesburg, published a case study on the economics of small traders in South Africa. The study titled "Somalinomics", outlined the trade practices of Somali traders in South Africa. According to Gastrow, most small foreign retailers set a low mark-up to make a high turnover, they locate their businesses in highly trafficked pedestrian areas, they open early and close late and have a wider product range.[105]

The South African Broadcasting Corporation conducted an interview with social media analyst Preetesh Sewraj which warned of the impact of fake news stories which were being used to create panic amongst South Africans.[106]

Politics edit

Xenophobic statements were commonly made by politicians from a wide range of political parties during the 2019 South African general election.[107] This has intensified as the ruling party risks losing its dominance of the political landscapes and parties from across the spectrum have relied on anti-immigrant messaging to bolster electoral support. Much of the local mobilisation appears rooted in struggles to control lucrative township tenders.

The politician Herman Mashaba and his political party ActionSA have consistently advocated a hard-line position against immigration resulting in accusations by other political parties that they are xenophobic or pandering to xenophobic sentiments.[108] Some of Mashaba's statements have been linked by the civil society organizations Amnesty International[109] and Right2Know[110] to incidence of xenophobic attacks and anti-migrant sentiment. In addition to ActionSA political parties such as the ANC,[76][107] Congress of the People,[107] DA,[107] Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF),[107][111][112] Freedom Front Plus,[107] IFP,[113][114][115] and Patriotic Alliance[111] have all made statements or committed actions that have been regarded as xenophobic or voicing xenophobic sentiment.

Legislation edit

The Refugees Act of 1998 initially granted significant rights to asylum seekers, however these rights were curtailed in later amendments passed in 2008, 2011, and 2017. [116] The right of refugees to basic healthcare and education has been removed, their right to seek work has been significantly limited, and refugees must now remain in the country for 10 years to apply for Permanent residency. In addition, refugee seekers are denied asylum if they enter the country through an unrecognised port of entry, or fail to report to a Refugee Reception Office within 5 days of entering the country.[117]

In 2020 the Gauteng Provincial government controversially proposed Gauteng Township Economic Development Bill which seeks to prevent businesses operated by foreign nationals without official South African residency from operating businesses in the province's informal economy. Supporters of the bill state that it will reduce xenophobia by clearing up regulatory regimes that foreigners are accused of regularly violating[118] whilst detractors of the bill state that its explicit targeting of foreigners is itself xenophobic[119][118] and legitimises xenophobia.[120]

In March 2022, Employment and Labour Minister Thulas Nxesi introduced a draft National Labour Migration Policy that lays out a quota system that limits the number of foreign nationals employed in certain sectors of the economy. The draft legislation has been criticized as xenophobic.[121]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Adam, Heribert, and Kogila Moodley, eds. Imagined liberation: Xenophobia, citizenship and identity in South Africa, Germany and Canada (African Sun Media, 2015). online
  • Akinola, Adeoye O. ed. The Political Economy of Xenophobia in Africa (Springer, 2018) 128pp.
  • Gordon, Steven Lawrence. "Understanding xenophobic hate crime in South Africa." Journal of Public Affairs 20.3 (2020): e2076.
  • Gordon, Steven. "Citizens’ preferences for tackling xenophobic violence in an African context: A South African case study." Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology (2021).
  • Kerr, Philippa, Kevin Durrheim, and John Dixon. "Xenophobic violence and struggle discourse in South Africa." Journal of Asian and African Studies 54.7 (2019): 995-1011. online
  • Landau, Loren B., eds. 'Exorcising the Demons Within: Xenophobia, Violence and Statecraft in Contemporary South Africa.' (Wits University Press, 2011) [1]
  • Makhado, Mashudu Peter, and Tshifhiwa Rachel Tshisikhawe. "How Apartheid Education Encouraged and Reinforced Tribalism and Xenophobia in South Africa." in Impact of Immigration and Xenophobia on Development in Africa (IGI Global, 2021) pp. 131–151.
  • Mudau, Tshimangadzo Selina, and Fumane Portia Khanare. "Xenophobia in Higher Education in South Africa." in Impact of Immigration and Xenophobia on Development in Africa (IGI Global, 2021) pp. 173–187.
  • Neocosmos, Michael. From ‘Foreign Natives’ to ‘Native Foreigners’: Explaining Xenophobia in Post-apartheid South Africa, Citizenship and Nationalism, Identity and Politics (2010).
  • Nyamnjoh, Francis B. Insiders and Outsiders: Citizenship and Xenophobia in Contemporary Southern Africa (Zed, 2006)
  • Tafira, Hashi Kenneth. Xenophobia in South Africa: A History (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018).
  • Tarisayi, Kudzayi Savious, and Sadhana Manik. "An unabating challenge: Media portrayal of xenophobia in South Africa." Cogent Arts & Humanities 7.1 (2020): 1859074. online

External links edit

  • One Night in Snake Park: Violence, Xenophobia, and Corruption in South Africa's Townships
  • Xenowatch: Monitoring and Mapping Xenophobia in South Africa
  • I Want to Go Home Forever: Stories of Becoming and Belonging in South Africa’s Great Metropolis
  • IOL – Xenophobia Special Report
  • Exorcising the Demons Within: Xenophobia, Violence and Statecraft in Contemporary South Africa
  • M&G – Xenophobia Special Report
  • Who to Blame and What's to Gain? Reflections on Space, State, and Violence in Kenya and South Africa – Report and AnalysisAfrica Spectrum
  • Boston Globe Photo Essay
  • Article on the Pogroms in Indian Journal
  • Statement on the attacks by the South African shack dwellers' movement Abahlali baseMjondolo
  • Foreign Natives to Native Foreigners: explaining xenophobia in contemporary South Africa', Michael Neocosmos, Codesria, Dakar, 2010
  • Helene Strauss's "Cinema of social recuperation: Xenophobic violence and migrant subjectivity in contemporary South Africa." Article on Ernesto Alfabeto Nhamuave and Adze Ugah's 'The Burning Man.'
  • Reports on Xenophobia from the Forced Migration Studies Programme at Wits University in Johannesburg
  • Ndlovu-Gatsheni: Africa for Africans or Africa for "Natives" Only? "New Nationalism" and Nativism in Zimbabwe and South AfricaAfrica Spectrum, Vol 44, No 1 (2009)
  • Rights at Risk: Refugees in the New South Africa, Honors Scholar Program Dissertation, University of Connecticut (2008).
  • "A Tale of Two Townships: Political Opportunity, Violent and Non-Violent Local Control in South Africa", Alex Park's paper exploring causal factors of the 2008 violence
  • "Broke-on-Broke Violence": What the U.S. press got wrong about South Africa's xenophobic riots, By Kerry Chance, Slate Magazine, 20 June 2008
  • The spatial politics of xenophobia: everyday practices of Congolese migrants in Johannesburg, by Jennifer Greenburg, Transformation, 2010
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xenophobia, south, africa, prior, 1994, immigrants, from, elsewhere, faced, discrimination, even, violence, south, africa, competition, scarce, economic, opportunities, after, majority, rule, 1994, contrary, expectations, incidence, xenophobia, increased, betw. Prior to 1994 immigrants from elsewhere faced discrimination and even violence in South Africa due competition for scarce economic opportunities After majority rule in 1994 contrary to expectations the incidence of xenophobia increased 1 Between 2000 and March 2008 at least 7 people died in what were identified as xenophobic attacks In May 2008 a series of attacks left 12 people dead although 10 of those killed were South African citizens 2 The attacks were partly motivated by xenophobia 3 In 2015 another nationwide spike in xenophobic attacks against immigrants in general prompted a number of foreign governments to begin repatriating their citizens 4 A Pew Research poll conducted in 2018 showed that 62 of South Africans viewed immigrants as a burden on society by taking jobs and social benefits and that 61 of South Africans thought that immigrants were more responsible for crime than other groups 5 Based on various police reports 60 of suspects arrested for violent crimes in Gauteng South Africa are illegal immigrants between 2015 and 2016 6 The number of foreign nationals who have been arrested by the Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department JMPD between 2016 and 2019 sit at 7841 7 Between 2010 and 2017 the illegal immigrant community in South Africa increased from 2 million people to 4 million people 5 The proportion of South Africa s total population that is foreign born increased from 2 8 in 2005 to 7 in 2019 according to the United Nations International Organization for Migration 8 in spite of widespread xenophobia in the country 9 This made South Africa the largest recipient of immigrants on the African continent in 2019 8 South Africa Johannesburg Metropolitan Gauteng Province criminal foreign nationals arrests 2016 to 2019 statistics 10 Contents 1 Xenophobia in South Africa before 1994 1 1 Attacks against Mozambican and Congolese immigrants 2 Xenophobia in South Africa after 1994 2 1 Foreigners and the South African Police Service 2 2 Violence before May 2008 3 May 2008 riots 4 2009 12 4 1 Fortress South Africa 5 2013 19 5 1 Attacks against Somali entrepreneurs 5 2 April 2015 attacks 5 3 October 2015 attacks 5 4 2016 Tshwane riots 5 5 2017 Anti immigration Protest 5 6 2019 Durban riots 5 7 2019 Johannesburg riots 6 2020 present 6 1 Operation Dudula 6 2 Dudula Movement 7 Reactions 8 Politics 9 Legislation 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksXenophobia in South Africa before 1994 editAttacks against Mozambican and Congolese immigrants edit Between 1984 and the end of hostilities in that country an estimated 50 000 to 350 000 Mozambicans fled to South Africa While never granted refugee status they were technically allowed to settle in the bantustans or black homelands created during the apartheid system The reality was more varied with the homeland of Lebowa banning Mozambican settlers outright while Gazankulu welcomed the refugees with support in the form of land and equipment Those in Gazankulu however found themselves confined to the homeland and liable for deportation should they officially enter South Africa and evidence exists that their hosts denied them access to economic resources 11 Unrest and civil war likewise saw large numbers of Congolese people emigrate to South Africa many illegally in 1993 and 1997 Subsequent studies found indications of xenophobic attitudes towards these refugees typified by them being denied access to the primary healthcare to which they were technically entitled 11 Xenophobia in South Africa after 1994 editDespite a lack of directly comparable data xenophobia in South Africa is perceived to have significantly increased after the election of a Black majority government in 1994 12 According to a 2004 study published by the Southern African Migration Project SAMP The ANC government in its attempts to overcome the divides of the past and build new forms of social cohesion embarked on an aggressive and inclusive nation building project One unanticipated by product of this project has been a growth in intolerance towards outsiders Violence against foreign citizens and African refugees has become increasingly common and communities are divided by hostility and suspicion 13 The study was based on a citizen survey across member states of the Southern African Development Community SADC and found South Africans expressing the harshest anti immigrant sentiment with 21 of South Africans in favour of a complete ban on foreign entry and 64 in favour of strict limitations on the numbers permitted By contrast the next highest proportion of respondents in favour of a complete ban on immigration were in neighbouring Namibia and Botswana at 10 Foreigners and the South African Police Service edit nbsp Burundian refugee afraid of re integration into South African society living rough 2009A 2004 study by the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation CSVR of attitudes amongst police officers in the Johannesburg area found that 87 of respondents believed that most undocumented immigrants in Johannesburg are involved in crime despite there being no statistical evidence to substantiate the perception Such views combined with the vulnerability of illegal aliens led to abuse including violence and extortion some analysts argued 14 In a March 2007 meeting with Home Affairs Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa Nqakula a representative of Burundian refugees in Durban claimed that immigrants could not rely on police for protection but instead found police mistreating them stealing from them and making unconfirmed allegations that they sell drugs 15 Two years earlier at a similar meeting in Johannesburg Mapisa Nqakula had admitted that refugees and asylum seekers were mistreated by police with xenophobic attitudes 16 Violence before May 2008 edit According to a 1998 Human Rights Watch report immigrants from Malawi Zimbabwe and Mozambique living in the Alexandra township were physically assaulted over a period of several weeks in January 1995 as armed gangs identified suspected undocumented migrants and marched them to the police station in an attempt to clean the township of foreigners 17 18 The campaign known as Buyelekhaya go back home blamed foreigners for crime unemployment and sexual attacks 19 In September 1998 a Mozambican national and two Senegalese citizens were thrown out of a train The assault was carried out by a group returning from a rally that blamed foreigners for unemployment crime and the spread of AIDS 20 In 2000 seven foreigners were killed on the Cape Flats over a five week period in what police described as xenophobic murders possibly motivated by the fear that outsiders would claim property belonging to locals 21 In October 2001 residents of the Zandspruit informal settlement gave Zimbabwean citizens ten days to leave the area When the foreigners failed to leave voluntarily they were forcefully evicted and their shacks were burned down and looted Community members said they were angry that Zimbabweans were employed whilst locals remained jobless and blamed the foreigners for a number of crimes No injuries were reported amongst the affected Zimbabweans 22 In the last week of 2005 and first week of 2006 at least four people including two Zimbabweans died in the Olievenhoutbosch settlement after foreigners were blamed for the death of a local man Shacks belonging to foreigners were set alight and locals demanded that police remove all immigrants from the area 23 In August 2006 Somali refugees appealed for protection after 21 Somali traders were killed in July of that year and 26 more in August The immigrants believed the murders to be motivated by xenophobia although police rejected the assertion of a concerted campaign to drive Somali traders out of townships in the Western Cape 24 Attacks on foreign nationals increased markedly in late 2007 12 and it is believed that there were at least a dozen attacks between January and May 2008 25 The most severe incidents occurred on 8 January 2008 when two Somali shop owners were murdered in the Eastern Cape towns of Jeffreys Bay and East London then in March 2008 when seven people were killed including Zimbabweans Pakistanis and a Somali national after their shops and shacks were set alight in Atteridgeville near Pretoria 25 May 2008 riots editMain article May 2008 South Africa riots 2008 South Africa riotsPart of the history of South Africa nbsp Map of South AfricaDateMay 2008LocationGauteng Durban MpumalangaSouth AfricaResult62 people dead 26 several hundred injured voluntary deportation of immigrants to home countries destruction of immigrant owned propertyOn 12 May 2008 a series of riots started in the township of Alexandra in the north eastern part of Johannesburg when locals attacked migrants from Mozambique Malawi and Zimbabwe killing two people and injuring 40 others 12 27 Some attackers were reported to have been singing Jacob Zuma s campaign song Umshini Wami Zulu Bring Me My Machine Gun 28 In the following weeks the violence spread first to other settlements in the Gauteng Province then to the coastal cities of Durban 29 and Cape Town 12 Attacks were also reported in parts of the Southern Cape 30 Mpumalanga 31 the North West and Free State 32 By the end of the riots 62 people were reported dead 33 1400 suspects were arrested in connection with the violence Nine months after the attacks 128 individuals had been convicted and 30 found not guilty in 105 concluded court cases 208 cases had been withdrawn and 156 were still being heard 34 One year after the attacks prosecutors said that 137 people had been convicted 182 cases had been withdrawn because witnesses or complainants had left the country 51 cases were underway or ready for trial and 82 had been referred for further investigation 35 In May 2009 one year after the attacks the Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa Cormsa said that foreigners remained under threat of violence and that little had been done to address the causes of the attacks The organisation complained of a lack of accountability for those responsible for public violence insufficient investigations into the instigators and the lack of a public government inquiry 36 2009 12 edit nbsp Anti xenophobia walk on Mandela Day 2010 Cape TownIn late May 2009 reports emerged regarding a possible resurgence of xenophobic related activity and the organising of attacks in the Western Cape Reports of threats and secret meetings by local businessmen surfaced in Gugulethu Khayelitsha and Philippi Cape Town Samora Machel in Philippi once again emerging as a flash point 37 In Gugulethu reports emerged of secret meetings by local businessmen discussing what to do about Somali shopkeepers The Anti Eviction Campaign brought these issues to the open by organising a series of anti xenophobia meetings attempting to find the root cause of the crisis 38 39 In November 2009 a community of 1500 2500 Zimbabwean farm workers was forcibly evicted from their homes in the informal settlements of De Doorns a grape farming town in the Western Cape No persons were physically assaulted but homes were trashed and looted and this led to the biggest displacement of foreign nationals since May 2008 The Zimbabweans were then housed in a displaced persons camp where some remained for a year until it was closed Researchers identified the role of a ward councillor Mpumelelo Lubisi in inciting the attack in possible collusion with informal labour brokers who had financial interests in getting rid of their Zimbabwean competitors South African workers also accused farmers of employing the Zimbabweans at less than minimum wage farmers and Zimbabwean workers denied this 40 In 2010 the press carried numerous articles claiming that there would be massive planned xenophobic violence at the end of the 2010 Football World Cup However this did not happen 41 In July 2012 there were new attacks in parts of Cape Town and in Botshabelo in the Free State 42 Fortress South Africa edit South Africa s borders were re militarised According to Christopher McMichael This shared state corporate project of building up a fortress South Africa also reveals a deeply entrenched seam of xenophobia in which undocumented migrants and refugees from African countries are painted as a security risk akin to terrorism and organised crime Parliamentary discussions on border security are rife with claims that foreign nationals are attempting to drain social grants and economic opportunities from citizens The packaging of illegal immigration as a national security threat which often relies on unsubstantiated claims about the inherent criminality of foreign nationals provides an official gloss on deeply entrenched governmental xenophobia in which African immigrants are targets for regular harassment rounding up and extortion by the police This normalisation of immigrants as figures of resentment may also fuel outbreaks of xenophobic violence 43 2013 19 editAttacks against Somali entrepreneurs edit nbsp Anti xenophobia poster Harold Cressy High School Cape Town 2014On 30 May 2013 25 year old Abdi Nasir Mahmoud Good was stoned to death The violence was captured on a mobile phone and shared on the Internet 44 Three Somali shopkeepers had been killed in June 2013 and the Somali government requested the South African authorities to do more to protect their nationals Among those murdered were two brothers who were allegedly hacked to death 45 The attacks led to public outcry and worldwide protests by the Somali diaspora in Cape Town 46 London 47 and Minneapolis 48 South African Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana Mashabane expressed the government s strongest condemnation of the violence which had seen looting and the death of a Somali shopkeeper 46 Somali Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon expressed concern for the safety of Somalis in South Africa calling on the government there to intervene to stop violence against Somali people after deadly attacks in Pretoria and Port Elizabeth 49 On 7 June 2014 a Somali national in his 50s was reportedly stoned to death and two others were seriously injured when the angry mob of locals attacked their shop in extension 6 late on Saturday Three more Somalis were wounded from gunshots and shops were looted 50 After another round of xenophobic violence against Somali entrepreneurs in April 2015 Somalia s government announced that it would evacuate its citizens from South Africa 51 April 2015 attacks edit Main article 2015 South African xenophobic riots nbsp March against xenophobia Johannesburg 23 April 2015In April 2015 there was an upsurge in xenophobic attacks throughout the country The attacks started in Durban and spread to Johannesburg Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini was accused of aggravating the attacks by saying that foreigners should go back to their countries 4 52 Moreover foreigners being a minority group with hardly any political muscle they were an easy target of the majority of black working class citizens 53 Locals looted foreigners shops and attacked immigrants in general forcing hundreds to relocate to police stations across the country The Malawian authorities subsequently began repatriating their nationals and a number of other foreign governments also announced that they would evacuate their citizens 4 More than 300 people were arrested 52 On 18 April 2015 a photographer from the Sunday Times James Oatway photographed a brutal attack on a Mozambican man The man Emmanuel Sithole died from his wounds 54 Four suspects were arrested within days of the publication of photographs in the edition of 19 April of The Sunday Times of the murder of Mozambican street vendor Emmanuel Sithole in Alexandra township the previous day 55 56 57 Sithole s name was not included in the official list of seven victims killed in the April 2015 attacks including an Ethiopian a Mozambican a Bangladeshi a Zimbabwean and three South Africans who were all killed in KwaZulu Natal 58 Despite the government s insistence that Sithole s murder was not xenophobic the South African National Defence Force SANDF was deployed in Alexandra township following the publication of the images 59 On 23 April several thousand demonstrators marched through central Johannesburg to protest against a spate of deadly attacks on immigrants They sang songs denouncing xenophobia and carried banners that read We are all Africans as migrant workers crowded balconies shouting their support 60 October 2015 attacks edit In October 2015 there were sustained xenophobic attacks in Grahamstown in the Eastern Cape It as reported that more than 500 people were displaced and more than 300 shops and homes looted and in some cases destroyed altogether In these attacks Muslims were specifically targeted 61 62 63 64 65 The Grahamstown xenophobic attacks that took place on 21 October 2015 and coincided with the FeesMustFall protest at Rhodes University lasted for several days The attacks were instigated by the taxi drivers protests where the drivers were protesting over the terrible state of roads the rise in crime and rumours of murders committed by foreigners Their demands were that the mayor ought to do something about their grievances Their grievances were not addressed by the mayor On 21 October 2015 taxi drivers attacked spaza shops owned by Pakistani Somali Bangladeshi and Ethiopian residents of Grahamstown There was a mobilisation of people by the taxi drivers with the aim of attacking and looting shops owned by foreigners 66 There was a rumour that insinuated that foreigners were responsible for the rampant murders in town that an Arab man had killed and mutilated women around town and that the police had not done anything to address these rumours Grahamstown residents in the townships were angry at the police for not doing anything to dispel the rumours despite having been warned by the councillors that the residents might end up taking the law into their own hands Thus it was these rumours that incited the attacks on foreigners On 23 October the Makana Municipality held a town meeting at City Hall The meeting was focused on how the municipality and the South African police would pacify the residents and address the situation During that meeting there was no representative from the police and one of the ward councillors further legitimized the attacks through xenophobic sentiments centred on not giving foreigners a platform to have their own shops 67 The attacks continued with taxi drivers transporting looters for free according to the residents of Grahamstown 68 Reports from the residents alleged that the police s attitudes were that of indifference with some participating in the looting 68 The policing of the attacks was elitist as there was a line on Beaufort street which pointed out where looting would be tolerated and where it would not be Thus looting was allowed in the township and not tolerated in town 68 The police only pacified the situation and restored order after a week of attacks and looting The xenophobic attacks in Grahamstown differed from the usual xenophobic attacks in South Africa as the ones in Grahamstown were mostly targeted at Muslims The main reason why Muslims were targeted was mainly due to the rumour that an Arab man was responsible for the murder of women in the town 2016 Tshwane riots edit See also Tshwane riots 2016 From 20 23 June 2016 a wave of riots hit the City of Tshwane Although the riots were sparked by political discontent within the ANC 69 Somali 70 Pakistani 71 and other foreign owned shops and micro enterprises were targeted for looting 72 and a number of foreigners were attacked 70 2017 Anti immigration Protest edit On Friday 24 February 2017 a large scale and officially sanctioned anti immigrant protest was organised and held in the Pretoria Protesters marched to the Foreign Ministry and handed a petition to government representatives Protesters accused immigrants of taking jobs from South Africans causing crime 73 and complained that t hey are arrogant and they don t know how to talk to people especially Nigerians 74 136 protesters were arrested during the march 74 2019 Durban riots edit On 25 March 2019 xenophobic riots targeting African immigrants broke out in Sydenham Jadhu Place and Overport areas of Durban 75 76 Around one hundred people attacked businesses owned by foreign nationals resulting in around 50 people seeking shelter in a local police station and mosque 77 Three people were killed in the riot 77 A speech given by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the ANC s election manifesto for the 2019 South African general election was blamed for contributing to xenophobic feeling wherein Ramaphosa committed to cracking down on undocumented foreigners involved in criminal activities 76 The attacks on foreigners was criticised by both the South African government 77 and political parties 75 amidst calls to ensure that xenophobic sentiment was not exploited for electoral purposes 78 2019 Johannesburg riots edit See also Johannesburg riots 2019 On 1 September 2019 riots and looting targeting shops owned by foreign nationals broke out in Jeppestown and Johannesburg CBD 79 following the death of a taxi driver 80 By 3 September police had made 189 arrests for looting 81 Around 50 businesses predominantly owned by Nigerians citation needed from the rest of the continent were reportedly destroyed or damaged during the incident 82 The riots coincided with a nationwide truck driver strike protesting against the employment of non South African truckers 83 After riots resulted in 12 deaths in the first week of September 640 of an estimated 100 000 Nigerians in South Africa signed up to take free flights offered by Nigeria to return to their home country 84 85 The riots led to a sit in protest in Greenmarket Square Cape Town by refugees demanding to be relocated to a third country outside of South Africa and other than their country of origin 86 87 2020 present editReports of xenophobic attacks targeting foreign truck drivers 88 and other foreigners 89 were recorded during the 2021 South African unrest Operation Dudula edit Reports of harassment of immigrant traders in Soweto and Johannesburg by a group dubbed Operation Dudula meaning to push in isiZulu began emerging in mid January 2022 90 This was preceded by a social media campaign in June 2020 calling for action against immigrants under the Operation Dudula banner 90 The Tsietsi Mashinini Centre in Soweto a known refuge for refugees and foreign nationals was raided by supporters of Operation Dudula on 6 February 2022 91 92 On 12 and 13 February 2022 residents of Soweto and Alexandra marched to Hillbrow and Orange Grove under the Operation Dudula banner to forcibly remove foreigners claiming that undocumented foreign nationals were responsible for rising levels of crimes and immoral activity such as drug dealing and prostitution 93 94 95 High rates of unemployment and lack of economic opportunities for South African nationals were also cited as grievances by the group 96 Police forcibly dispersed the Operation Dudula marchers which resulted in clashes between the two groups 96 Representatives of Operation Dudula denied that their movement was xenophobic despite their stated aim to unilaterally forcibly evict illegal foreigners from South Africa 97 Dudula Movement edit The Dudula Movement a similar although unrelated movement to Operation Dudula emerged around the same time in Alexandra Johannesburg 98 99 Acting as a vigilante organisation it targets foreign nationals its members believe to be undocumented 99 98 They deny targeting only black undocumented foreigners but undocumented foreigners of all races and national origins 99 Members of the movement have expressed grievances with lawlessness unemployment and a lack of economic opportunities as reasons for joining 98 Reactions editSouth African Small Business Development Minister Lindiwe Zulu said that foreign business owners cannot expect to co exist peacefully with local business owners unless they share their trade secrets According to Zulu foreign business owners had an advantage over South African business owners due to marginalisation under apartheid They cannot barricade themselves in and not share their practices with local business owners Zulu said 100 The comments were met with widespread criticism 101 102 103 An inquiry by the Competition Commission the country s anti trust regulator has indicated that a difference in performance between foreign and local business owners has created a perception that foreigners are more successful than locals While there is nothing wrong with examining the dynamics of competition the insinuation that foreign business owners were to blame for the decline of South African owned small business was worrying 104 Vanya Gastrow a researcher from the African Centre for Migration in Johannesburg published a case study on the economics of small traders in South Africa The study titled Somalinomics outlined the trade practices of Somali traders in South Africa According to Gastrow most small foreign retailers set a low mark up to make a high turnover they locate their businesses in highly trafficked pedestrian areas they open early and close late and have a wider product range 105 The South African Broadcasting Corporation conducted an interview with social media analyst Preetesh Sewraj which warned of the impact of fake news stories which were being used to create panic amongst South Africans 106 Politics editXenophobic statements were commonly made by politicians from a wide range of political parties during the 2019 South African general election 107 This has intensified as the ruling party risks losing its dominance of the political landscapes and parties from across the spectrum have relied on anti immigrant messaging to bolster electoral support Much of the local mobilisation appears rooted in struggles to control lucrative township tenders The politician Herman Mashaba and his political party ActionSA have consistently advocated a hard line position against immigration resulting in accusations by other political parties that they are xenophobic or pandering to xenophobic sentiments 108 Some of Mashaba s statements have been linked by the civil society organizations Amnesty International 109 and Right2Know 110 to incidence of xenophobic attacks and anti migrant sentiment In addition to ActionSA political parties such as the ANC 76 107 Congress of the People 107 DA 107 Economic Freedom Fighters EFF 107 111 112 Freedom Front Plus 107 IFP 113 114 115 and Patriotic Alliance 111 have all made statements or committed actions that have been regarded as xenophobic or voicing xenophobic sentiment Legislation editThe Refugees Act of 1998 initially granted significant rights to asylum seekers however these rights were curtailed in later amendments passed in 2008 2011 and 2017 116 The right of refugees to basic healthcare and education has been removed their right to seek work has been significantly limited and refugees must now remain in the country for 10 years to apply for Permanent residency In addition refugee seekers are denied asylum if they enter the country through an unrecognised port of entry or fail to report to a Refugee Reception Office within 5 days of entering the country 117 In 2020 the Gauteng Provincial government controversially proposed Gauteng Township Economic Development Bill which seeks to prevent businesses operated by foreign nationals without official South African residency from operating businesses in the province s informal economy Supporters of the bill state that it will reduce xenophobia by clearing up regulatory regimes that foreigners are accused of regularly violating 118 whilst detractors of the bill state that its explicit targeting of foreigners is itself xenophobic 119 118 and legitimises xenophobia 120 In March 2022 Employment and Labour Minister Thulas Nxesi introduced a draft National Labour Migration Policy that lays out a quota system that limits the number of foreign nationals employed in certain sectors of the economy The draft legislation has been criticized as xenophobic 121 See also editImmigration to South Africa Racism in South Africa Operation Fiela Illegal immigration to South AfricaReferences edit From Foreign Natives to Native Foreigners Explaining Xenophobia in Post Apartheid South Africa Michael Neocosmos CODESRIA Dakar 2010 Thinane Jonas Sello 12 November 2022 Xenophobia in South Africa Alignment of policy making with the aim of the Missio Dei Mission of God Wawasan Jurnal Ilmiah Agama Dan Sosial Budaya 7 1 13 26 doi 10 15575 jw v7i1 17408 ISSN 2502 3489 Nyamnjoh Francis B 2014 Exorcising the demons within Xenophobia violence and statecraft in contemporary South Africa Journal of Contemporary African Studies 32 3 397 401 doi 10 1080 09637494 2014 937165 S2CID 154444370 a b c Attacks on foreigners spread in South Africa weekend violence feared Los Angeles Times 17 April 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2015 a b Tamir Christine Budiman 3 May 2019 In South Africa racial divisions and pessimism about democracy loom over elections Pew Research Center Retrieved 6 May 2019 60 of suspects arrested for violent crimes in Gauteng are illegal immigrants say police TimesLIVE Retrieved 21 June 2023 Nearly 8000 foreign nationals arrested by JMPD since 2016 1 January 2022 Archived from the original on 1 January 2022 Retrieved 21 June 2023 a b WORLD MIGRATION REPORT 2020 PDF International Organization for Migration United Nations 2019 p 56 amp 57 ISSN 1561 5502 Retrieved 18 February 2020 Xenophobia isn t keeping immigrants out of SA here are the latest if contentious numbers BusinessInsider Retrieved 17 February 2020 Nearly 8000 foreign nationals arrested by JMPD since 2016 1 January 2022 Archived from the original on 1 January 2022 Retrieved 21 June 2023 a b Jonny Steinberg ISS Monograph No 117 Mozambican and Congolese Refugees in South Africa A mixed reception PDF Institute for Security Studies Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2008 Retrieved 5 September 2008 a b c d From Foreign Natives to Native Foreigners Explaining Xenophobia in Post Apartheid South Africa Michael Neocosmos CODESRIA Dakar 2010 Jonathan Crush and Wade Pendleton South African Migration Project 30 Regionalizing Xenophobia Citizen Attitudes to Immigration and refugee policy in Southern Africa PDF Institute for Democracy in South Africa Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2016 Themba Masuku Targeting Foreigners Xenophobia among Johannesburg s police Institute for Security Studies Crime Quarterly No 15 2006 Archived from the original on 10 June 2008 Retrieved 6 September 2008 Police prey on refugees claims Independent Online Retrieved 6 September 2008 Minister slams treatment of refugees by cops Independent Online Retrieved 6 September 2008 Thousands flee S Africa attacks BBC 19 May 2008 Retrieved 19 May 2008 South Africa Xenophobic Rage Leaves Trail of Havoc in Gauteng AllAfrica com Retrieved 19 May 2008 South Africa Burning the welcome mat Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation Archived from the original on 15 December 2008 Retrieved 8 September 2008 Nahla Valji Creating the Nation The Rise of Violent Xenophobia in the New South Africa PDF Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation Retrieved 8 September 2008 Xenophobic attacks seven die in one month Independent Online Retrieved 6 September 2008 Raging mob evicts Zimbabweans burns homes Independent Online Retrieved 6 September 2008 36 arrested after 2 more die in Tshwane foreigner riots Cape Argus Retrieved 6 September 2008 Somali s turn to HRC as murder toll soars Independent Online Retrieved 6 September 2008 a b Recent attacks tip of xenophobic iceberg TheTimes co za Archived from the original on 7 January 2009 Retrieved 19 May 2008 Editorial Reuters 31 May 2008 South Africa violence toll rises to 62 Reuters a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a first has generic name help South African mob kills migrants BBC 12 May 2008 Retrieved 19 May 2008 What the U S press got wrong about South Africa s xenophobic riots Slate Magazine 20 June 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2015 South Africa attacks reach Durban BBC 21 May 2008 Retrieved 21 May 2008 Cape mounts relief effort as xenophobia spreads SABC Archived from the original on 12 June 2008 Retrieved 23 May 2008 Violence spills into Mpumalanga The Times UK Archived from the original on 7 January 2009 Retrieved 21 May 2008 South Africa army mobilises to quell mob violence Agence France Presse Archived from the original on 11 June 2008 Retrieved 22 May 2008 Reuters Editorial 31 May 2008 South Africa violence toll rises to 62 Reuters a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a author has generic name help Xenophobia cases must be finalised The Times Retrieved 15 March 2009 permanent dead link Anniversary of xeno attacks The Times Archived from the original on 15 May 2009 Retrieved 11 May 2009 Xenophobic violence has ended but foreigners still feel unsafe Business Day Retrieved 11 May 2009 dead link Get out of Philippi or else Somali shopkeeper told Cape Times Tension brewing in townships over foreigners Cape Argus Archived from the original on 6 June 2009 Retrieved 2 June 2009 Traders threatened Sowetan Archived from the original on 14 February 2010 Misago JP 2009 Violence Labour and the Displacement of Zimbabweans in De Doorns Western Cape Forced Migration Studies Program Migration Policy Brief 2 To Be Betrayed By Your Brother Archived 23 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Rosaleen Ortiz City University of New York 2010 Xenophobia bomb going off while the government dithers Editorial at The Times 13 July 2012 The re militarisation of South Africa s borders Christopher McMichael Open Democracy July 2012 Somalia demands action over brutal killing Retrieved 9 June 2013 Somalis march in Cape Town against South Africa attacks BBC News 7 June 2013 a b Somalis call on S Africa to provide protection Retrieved 9 June 2013 London Somalis protest at South African embassy against killing Demotix Archived from the original on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Somali Americans in Minnesota protest South Africa violence KMSP TV 7 June 2013 Archived from the original on 12 March 2014 Retrieved 18 March 2015 allAfrica com South Africa Shirdon Calls On South Africa to Protect Somali Nationals allAfrica com Retrieved 18 March 2015 Two dead in xenophobic attacks in S Africa World Bulletin Retrieved 9 June 2014 Foreign embassies prepare to evacuate citizens from SA City Press 16 April 2015 Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2015 a b South Africa anti immigrant violence Hundreds held BBC News 19 April 2015 Retrieved 19 April 2015 Dippenaar Jacques 2015 When Xenophobia Rears Its Ugly Head A Challenge to Responsible and Responsive Governance PDF Good Governance Learning Network 26 TimesLIVE www timeslive co za Tromp Beauregard Oatway James 19 April 2015 The brutal death of Emmanuel Sithole The Sunday Times Archived from the original on 20 April 2015 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Swails Brent 21 April 2015 Xenophobic killing in South African township caught by photographer CNN Archived from the original on 22 April 2015 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Dipa Karishma Makhafola Gertrude 21 April 2015 These are the four Sithole suspects The Star ANA Archived from the original on 23 April 2015 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Ferreira Emsie 28 April 2015 Sithole murder not xenophobic Mahlobo IOL ANA Archived from the original on 1 May 2015 Retrieved 30 April 2015 SANDF to be deployed in Alexandra the Citizen Archived from the original on 11 August 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Thousands protest against anti immigrant riots in S Africa Arab News 24 April 2015 Retrieved 24 April 2015 The languages of xenophobia in post apartheid South Africa Reviewing migrancy foreignness and solidarity Agenda Camalita Naicker 2016 Xenophobia in Grahamstown We are not leaving KJ VAN RENSBURG F MTHONTI amp M ERSKOG The Daily Maverick 29 October 2015 Where poverty meets xenophobia Grahamstown a city in crisis Paddy O Halloran The Daily Maverick 27 October 2015 Contested Space and Citizenship in Grahamstown South Africa Paddy O Halloran Journal of Asian amp African Studies 2016 The languages of xenophobia in post apartheid South Africa Reviewing migrancy foreignness and solidarity Camalita Naicker Agenda Feminist Magazine 2006 P O Halloran Contested space and citizenship in Grahamstown South Africa2016 http journals sagepub com doi abs 10 1177 0021909616664920 P O Halloran Where Poverty meets Xenophobia Grahamstown a city in crisis Daily Maverick 2016 https www dailymaverick co za article 2015 10 27 where poverty meets xenophobia grahamstown a city in crisis WjDZHVWWZ0w a b c P O Halloran Contested space and citizenship in Grahamstown South Africa 2016 http journals sagepub com doi abs 10 1177 0021909616664920 Digital TMG Security minister admits ANC members sparked Tshwane riots Rand Daily Mail Retrieved 7 July 2016 a b GroundUp Somalis fear for their lives after Tshwane riots Daily Maverick www dailymaverick co za 30 June 2016 Retrieved 7 July 2016 Dlamini Neo Goba Thabang Thaba And Penwell Shop owners fearful in the wake of Tshwane riots Times LIVE Retrieved 7 July 2016 Nkosi Bongani Shops remain shut in Tshwane as protests looting subside Times LIVE Retrieved 7 July 2016 Madia Tshidi 24 February 2017 Political parties condemn xenophobic violence News24 Archived from the original on 8 September 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2017 a b South African police use force to disperse anti immigration protesters The Guardian Associated Press 24 February 2017 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 February 2017 a b Malema Ramaphosa amp Dlamini Zuma condemn Durban xenophobic attacks TimesLIVE Retrieved 1 April 2019 a b c Scores of foreign nationals attacked in Durban SABC News 27 March 2019 Retrieved 1 April 2019 a b c Xenophobic attacks spark SA response 31 March 2019 Retrieved 1 April 2019 Electioneering must be free from xenophobia and respect all Cape Times www iol co za Retrieved 1 April 2019 Haffajee Ferial 2 September 2019 BATTLEFIELD JOZI City in lockdown as looters target migrant rich areas across Johannesburg and East Rand Daily Maverick Retrieved 3 September 2019 Police monitor taxi drivers as they gather in the Pretoria city centre SABC News 2 September 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2019 Gauteng violence 5 confirmed dead 189 arrested News24 3 September 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2019 Xenophobic attacks shame South Africa as regional leaders meet Moneyweb 3 September 2019 Retrieved 3 September 2019 Christensen Susan Njanji Sofia 3 September 2019 Scores arrested in looting xenophobic protests The M amp G Online Retrieved 4 September 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Nicolas Jean Breton 10 September 2019 Violences en Afrique du Sud le Nigeria va repatrier 600 de ses ressortissants Le Monde in French Hundreds of Nigerians to take free evacuation from South Africa Reuters 11 September 2019 Retrieved 12 September 2019 Palm Kaylynn We need to leave this country Foreign nationals in CT call on UN for help ewn co za Retrieved 29 December 2019 Washinyira Tariro 8 October 2019 Refugees accuse UNHCR of incompetence GroundUp News Retrieved 29 December 2019 Grootes Stephen 11 July 2021 Prison Diaries Analysis Images of thugs burning the country are bad for South Africa even worse for Zuma Daily Maverick Retrieved 16 February 2022 Felix Jason Zuma Unrest SSA looking at possibilities of xenophobic violence and right wing extremism News24 Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b GroundUp Masego Mafata 2 February 2022 Immigrant traders in Gauteng fear for their safety after threats of xenophobic attacks News24 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Khumalo Fred 13 February 2022 Close Up Why blame outsiders for our internal woes Citypress Retrieved 16 February 2022 Naidoo Jay 9 February 2022 OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT RAMAPHOSA We must defuse South Africa s xenophobia time bomb now Daily Maverick Retrieved 16 February 2022 Villiers James de 15 February 2022 IN DEPTH Removing foreign nationals by force What is Operation Dudula News24 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Operation Dudula takes to the streets of Hillbrow eNCA www enca com 12 February 2022 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Dano Zodidi 14 February 2022 Education activist wants support for undocumented learners affected by Operation Dudula www iol co za Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b Operation Dudula accuses SAPS of being involved in criminal networks eNCA www enca com 14 February 2022 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Amashabalala Mawande 30 January 2022 We ll target illegal foreigners then big business but we re not xenophobes TimesLIVE Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b c Bhengu Cebelihle 9 March 2022 Dangerous thugs or providing a solution Dudula Movement clashes in Alexandra splits SA TimesLIVE Retrieved 9 March 2022 a b c Modise Kgomotso Dudula Movement denies that it is only targeting black foreign nationals ewn co za Retrieved 9 March 2022 Magubane Khulekani Reveal trade secrets minister tells foreigners Business Day Retrieved 24 June 2015 Mind your own business minister Mail amp Guardian 29 January 2015 Retrieved 24 June 2015 Foreign business owners are not the enemy Mail amp Guardian 2 February 2015 Retrieved 24 June 2015 Small business minister wants spaza shop trade secrets The Daily Vox 28 January 2015 Retrieved 24 June 2015 Small foreign owned retailers in South Africa are more competitive than local rivals Quartz Africa Retrieved 24 June 2015 Gastrow Vanya Amit Roni Somalinomics A Case study on the economics of Somali informal trade in the Western Cape Academia Retrieved 24 June 2015 Looking at the spread of fake news on social media retrieved 10 September 2019 a b c d e f Xenophobia and party politics in South Africa The Mail amp Guardian 3 September 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2022 Gerber Jan ActionSA EFF square off over immigration News24 Retrieved 20 January 2022 South Africa Years of impunity for xenophobic crimes driving the latest attacks Amnesty International 4 September 2019 Retrieved 16 July 2020 Right2Know blames Mashaba Ramaphosa Zwelithini for attacks on foreigners www iol co za Retrieved 16 July 2020 a b Haffajee Ferial 19 January 2022 WORKPLACE INTERFERENCE Bitter taste Malema hops onto anti foreigner band wagon Daily Maverick Retrieved 20 January 2022 EFF visits restaurants to see gap between how many foreigners South Africans hired www iol co za Retrieved 20 January 2022 Fingerpointing after KZN hostel attack SABC Archived from the original on 12 June 2008 Retrieved 21 May 2008 ANC IFP join forces to help fight xenophobia SABC Archived from the original on 12 June 2008 Retrieved 21 May 2008 Gerber Jan Buthelezi takes on Cele in Parliament debate about xenophobic violence News24 Retrieved 20 January 2022 Moyo Khangelani 18 November 2021 South Africa Reckons with Its Status as a Top Immigration Destination Apartheid History and Economic Challenges migrationpolicy org Retrieved 1 August 2023 Van Lennep Tove 17 September 2019 Migration II The South African migration policy landscape Helen Suzman Foundation Retrieved 1 August 2023 a b Concerns mount over draft Gauteng bill banning foreigners from owning businesses in townships www msn com Retrieved 9 October 2020 Banning foreigners from business in Gauteng townships will be a disaster experts TimesLIVE Retrieved 9 October 2020 EDITORIAL Legitimising xenophobia BusinessLIVE Retrieved 9 October 2020 Grootes Stephen 1 March 2022 ANALYSIS Government s plan to introduce foreign labour quotas is unjust and impossible to enforce Daily Maverick Retrieved 10 March 2022 Further reading editAdam Heribert and Kogila Moodley eds Imagined liberation Xenophobia citizenship and identity in South Africa Germany and Canada African Sun Media 2015 online Akinola Adeoye O ed The Political Economy of Xenophobia in Africa Springer 2018 128pp Gordon Steven Lawrence Understanding xenophobic hate crime in South Africa Journal of Public Affairs 20 3 2020 e2076 Gordon Steven Citizens preferences for tackling xenophobic violence in an African context A South African case study Peace and Conflict Journal of Peace Psychology 2021 Kerr Philippa Kevin Durrheim and John Dixon Xenophobic violence and struggle discourse in South Africa Journal of Asian and African Studies 54 7 2019 995 1011 online Landau Loren B eds Exorcising the Demons Within Xenophobia Violence and Statecraft in Contemporary South Africa Wits University Press 2011 1 Makhado Mashudu Peter and Tshifhiwa Rachel Tshisikhawe How Apartheid Education Encouraged and Reinforced Tribalism and Xenophobia in South Africa in Impact of Immigration and Xenophobia on Development in Africa IGI Global 2021 pp 131 151 Mudau Tshimangadzo Selina and Fumane Portia Khanare Xenophobia in Higher Education in South Africa in Impact of Immigration and Xenophobia on Development in Africa IGI Global 2021 pp 173 187 Neocosmos Michael From Foreign Natives to Native Foreigners Explaining Xenophobia in Post apartheid South Africa Citizenship and Nationalism Identity and Politics 2010 Nyamnjoh Francis B Insiders and Outsiders Citizenship and Xenophobia in Contemporary Southern Africa Zed 2006 Tafira Hashi Kenneth Xenophobia in South Africa A History Palgrave Macmillan 2018 Tarisayi Kudzayi Savious and Sadhana Manik An unabating challenge Media portrayal of xenophobia in South Africa Cogent Arts amp Humanities 7 1 2020 1859074 onlineExternal links editOne Night in Snake Park Violence Xenophobia and Corruption in South Africa s Townships Xenowatch Monitoring and Mapping Xenophobia in South Africa I Want to Go Home Forever Stories of Becoming and Belonging in South Africa s Great Metropolis IOL Xenophobia Special Report Exorcising the Demons Within Xenophobia Violence and Statecraft in Contemporary South Africa M amp G Xenophobia Special Report NEWS24 Xenophobia Special Report The Times Xenophobia Special Report Who to Blame and What s to Gain Reflections on Space State and Violence in Kenya and South Africa Report and AnalysisAfrica Spectrum Boston Globe Photo Essay Article on the Pogroms in Indian Journal Statement on the attacks by the South African shack dwellers movement Abahlali baseMjondolo Foreign Natives to Native Foreigners explaining xenophobia in contemporary South Africa Michael Neocosmos Codesria Dakar 2010 Journalists who documented the death of Ernesto Alfabeto Nhamuave help repatriate his body Helene Strauss s Cinema of social recuperation Xenophobic violence and migrant subjectivity in contemporary South Africa Article on Ernesto Alfabeto Nhamuave and Adze Ugah s The Burning Man Reports on Xenophobia from the Forced Migration Studies Programme at Wits University in Johannesburg A collection of articles and essays by civil society on the May 2008 Xenophobic attacks Ndlovu Gatsheni Africa for Africans or Africa for Natives Only New Nationalism and Nativism in Zimbabwe and South AfricaAfrica Spectrum Vol 44 No 1 2009 Rights at Risk Refugees in the New South Africa Honors Scholar Program Dissertation University of Connecticut 2008 A Tale of Two Townships Political Opportunity Violent and Non Violent Local Control in South Africa Alex Park s paper exploring causal factors of the 2008 violence Broke on Broke Violence What the U S press got wrong about South Africa s xenophobic riots By Kerry Chance Slate Magazine 20 June 2008 The spatial politics of xenophobia everyday practices of Congolese migrants in Johannesburg by Jennifer Greenburg Transformation 2010 2 3 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Xenophobia in South Africa amp oldid 1185482252, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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