Violence spreads in South Africa as grievances boil over
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[July 13, 2021]
By Alexander Winning and Wendell Roelf
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -Protesters clashed
with police in several areas of South Africa and looters ransacked
shopping malls on Tuesday as frustrations over poverty and inequality
boiled over into the country's worst unrest in years.
Security officials said the government was working to ensure the
violence and looting did not spread further, but they stopped short of
declaring a state of emergency.
"No amount of unhappiness or personal circumstances from our people
gives the right to anyone to loot, vandalise and do as they please and
break the law," Police Minister Bheki Cele told a news conference.
The violence was triggered by the jailing of former president Jacob Zuma
as his supporters took to the streets last week, but the situation has
evolved into an outpouring of anger over persistent poverty and
inequality in South Africa 27 years after the end of apartheid.
The economic impact of COVID-19 restrictions has exacerbated the
problems.
Troops were moving in to flashpoints on Tuesday as outnumbered police
seemed helpless to prevent attacks and looting on businesses in Zuma's
home province KwaZulu-Natal and in Gauteng province, where the country's
biggest city, Johannesburg, is located. Columns of armoured personnel
carriers rolled down highways.
Up to 30 people have been killed during the unrest, four in Gauteng and
26 in KwaZulu-Natal, according to state and provincial authorities.
Police Minister Cele put the official death toll at 10.
Shops, petrol stations and government buildings have been forced to
close. Looters carried off items ranging from beer and foodstuffs to
household appliances, footage showed, and at least one shopping mall was
completely trashed.
On the streets, protesters hurled stones and police who responded with
rubber bullets, Reuters witnesses said.
In some areas of the coastal city of Durban where shops were being
looted, there was no police visibility, a Reuter witness said. At a mall
in Johannesburg's Soweto township, police and military were patrolling
as shop owners assessed the damage.
Cele said 757 people had been arrested so far. He said the government
would act to prevent it from spreading further and warned that people
would not be allowed "to make a mockery of our democratic state".
Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, speaking at the same news
conference, said she did not think a state of emergency should be
imposed yet.
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Members of the military keep guard at Diepkloof mall as the country
deploys army to quell unrest linked to jailing of former President
Jacob Zuma, in Soweto, South Africa, July 13, 2021. REUTERS/Siphiwe
Sibeko
UNFULFILLED PROMISE
Zuma, 79, was sentenced last month for defying a constitutional
court order to give evidence at an inquiry investigating high-level
corruption during his nine years in office until 2018.
The decision to jail him resulted from legal proceedings seen as a
test of post-apartheid South Africa's ability to enforce the rule of
law, including against powerful politicians.
But any confrontation with soldiers risks fuelling charges by Zuma
and his supporters that they are victims of a politically motivated
crackdown by his successor, President Cyril Ramaphosa.
The violence worsened as Zuma challenged his 15-month jail term in
South Africa's top court on Monday. Judgement was reserved until an
unspecified date.
But the deteriorating situation pointed to wider problems and
unfulfilled expectations that followed the end of white minority
rule in 1994 and the election of Nelson Mandela in South Africa's
first free and democratic vote.
The economy is struggling to emerge from the damage wrought by
Africa's worst COVID-19 epidemic, forcing it to repeatedly impose
restrictions on businesses that have hurt an already fragile
recovery.
The crisis may have widened the gulf between haves and have-nots.
Growing joblessness has left people ever more desperate.
Unemployment stood at a new record high of 32.6% in the first three
months of 2021.
But in an address on Monday night, Ramaphosa said: "What we are
witnessing now are opportunistic acts of criminality, with groups of
people instigating chaos merely as a cover for looting and theft."
(Additional reporting by Tim Cocks, Siphiwe Sibeko and Tanisha
Heiberg in Johannesburg and Siyabonga Sishi in Durban, Writing by
Angus MacSwan, Editing by Gareth Jones)
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