President Jacob Zuma on Monday hit
out at other African countries after South Africa faced a backlash over the
wave of anti-foreigner attacks in the country.
While Zuma condemned the violence,
saying immigrants contributed to the South African economy, he also questioned
why so many had flocked to South Africa.
*President Zuma
“As much as we can have a problem
alleged to be xenophobic, our brother countries contributed to this,” he said.
“Why are the citizens not in their
countries?”
Earlier in April, mobs in
Johannesburg and in the port city of Durban targeted migrants, ransacking their
homes and burning shops.
Seven people died and thousands were
displaced.
South Africa faced a backlash over
the attacks and regional relations have been strained, with Zimbabwe, Malawi
and Mozambique organising for some of their fearful citizens to return home.
Nigeria has also recalled its
ambassador in Pretoria over the attacks while there have been widespread calls
for South African products to be boycotted.
But Zuma went on a counter-offensive
Monday, saying his government would strengthen measures to tackle illegal
immigration.
“Some of them (immigrants) had very
serious allegations against their own countries to explain why they are in
South Africa,” Zuma said, speaking on Freedom Day that marks the country’s
first democratic elections in 1994.
“In fact, some of them warned us
that there is almost certainly another wave of refugees coming given the
developments in their own countries.
“We have to address the underlying
causes of the violence and tensions, which is the legacy of poverty,
unemployment and inequality in our country and our continent and the
competition for limited resources,” Zuma said.
Many South Africans have blamed the
attacks on poverty and a severe jobs shortage in Africa’s second biggest
economy. Undocumented immigrants are often accused of accepting work for less
pay.
The spate of attacks has revived
memories of xenophobic bloodshed in 2008, when 62 people were killed,
tarnishing South Africa’s post-apartheid image as a “rainbow nation” of
different groups living in harmony.
The South African army was deployed
in some of the worst hit areas last week in a bid to crack down on the violence
against immigrants.
source:www.vanguardngr.com
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