TL;DR
Human Rights Watch reports a surge in xenophobic attacks in South Africa, driven by anti-immigration protests targeting foreign nationals, particularly Zimbabweans. Groups like March and March and Operation Dudula are leading these movements in major cities.
Johannesburg, South Africa – Human Rights Watch has warned of a new wave of xenophobic attacks in South Africa as anti-immigration groups intensify protests and vigilante-style actions targeting foreign nationals, including Zimbabweans.
The warning came in a report released on Tuesday amid rising protests in South African cities, including Johannesburg, Pretoria and Durban.
Groups such as March and March, and Operation Dudula, two South African anti-immigration movements advocating stricter enforcement against undocumented migration, have led protests in several cities.
“We continue to receive reports through our community networks of intimidation, threats, harassment, unlawful evictions, workplace discrimination, police extortion, and denial of access to healthcare and other basic services affecting migrants and refugees,” said Mike Ndlovu, media coordinator for Kopanang Africa Against Xenophobia (KAAX).
“The most common forms of harm include verbal abuse, evictions, discrimination at clinics and workplaces, confiscation of goods and in some cases physical assaults,” Ndlovu told Al Jazeera.
Messages and videos circulating on social media show anti-immigration activists calling for foreign nationals to leave South Africa by June 30.
However, many incidents are believed to go unreported due to fear of retaliation, arrest or deportation.
What is causing the backlash?
In some townships and urban areas affected by poverty, inequality and unemployment, anti-immigration movements appear to be gaining support.
Political parties such as the Patriotic Alliance, ActionSA, and uMkhonto we Sizwe increasingly frame migrants as competitors for jobs and public services.
Mpho Makhubela, a member of the Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa (CoRMSA) and an activist in KAAX, said vigilante groups are growing in response to wider social frustration.
South Africa’s constitution and international human rights law protect the right to protest, but that does not include permission to commit violence
by Nomathamsanqa Masiko-Mpaka, HRW South Africa researcher
“Vigilante groups feed off the country’s frustrations over unemployment, socioeconomic decline and the lack of effort to address inequality gaps,” he told Al Jazeera.
“The country continues to face the enormous task of addressing the legacies of apartheid.”
The human toll
The violence and harassment have had a direct impact on migrants’ daily lives.
Mpofu, a Zimbabwean former courier at Mr Delivery, a food and package delivery company, recalled being confronted by a vigilante group in Pretoria CBD in January while working with colleagues from Congo and Malawi.