City Press.png

 

 

‘Cops told us to loot’

 

 

Khadija Patel, Xolani Mbanjwa, Zinhle Mapumulo, Abram Mashego and Sipho 
Masondo, City Press, Johannesburg, 25 January 2015

 

Foreign shop owners and those who took part in, or witnessed, the looting of 
those shops this week described how police actively stole goods and helped 
others raid the shops during the worst attacks on foreigners South Africa has 
seen in seven years.

 

An estimated 120 foreign-owned or foreign-run shops were looted in Soweto and 
nearby Kagiso this week. Foreigners have described how some police officers 
told them to “go back to where you come from”, demanded bribes to do their jobs 
and helped themselves to goods on the shelves, including airtime and cooldrinks.

 

Widespread reports of criminal and xenophobic ­behaviour by some police 
officers tasked with stopping the looting in Soweto fly in the face of 
statements made by Gauteng police commissioner Joel Mothiba and Community 
Safety MEC Sizakele Nkosi-Malobane that what took place in Soweto during the 
course of the week was “criminal and not xenophobic”.

 

While looting was continuing in Soweto on Thursday, Mothiba told a press 
conference that the situation was “under control”.

 

Yesterday, 10 young Soweto residents in different parts of the township, who 
admitted to taking part in the looting, told City Press that the police had 
helped them do it.

 

Zondi residents Charlie Masondo and Tshepo Radiapeng said they watched as 
police instructed looters to queue outside a foreign-owned shop and allowed 
four of them in at a time to prevent a stampede.

 

“I have never seen something like cops helping people to steal,” said Radiapeng.

 

Masondo said he was shocked.

 

“I was expecting the cops to stop the looters from stealing, but they allowed 
and organised them to do it. All they kept on saying was that people should not 
vandalise the shops,” he said.

 

A group of young people in Zola North recounted how they looted the Sea Point 
general dealer in their neighbourhood.

 

“We took everything. This was a fully fledged shop. There was everything here. 
There were six double-door fridges used for soft drinks. We took everything.”

 

One said the police looked on while they looted.

 

“They were actually helping us. They were driving a Nissan 1400 bakkie. They 
actually came back to look for what might have remained on Friday.”

 

One of the other young men, who declined to be named, showed City Press one of 
fridges they had ­looted. It has already been sold to a new owner.

 

Next to Sea Point, there is a shop owned by a South African. It was not 
plundered. All foreign-owned tuck shops in Zola North were closed this week.

 

Foreign shop owners to whom City Press spoke on Friday told of how, in some 
cases, police officers ­refused to protect their shops, and instead helped 
those who were looting.

 

Somali shop owner Ismail Adam (29), who ran a shop in Slovoville, Soweto, said 
he and his brother hid in the toilet after looters struck at about 5pm on 
­Wednesday.

 

The police arrived later.

 

“I saw mamas come and the police gave them bread. I asked them why they gave 
away this bread [because it] is my money. They told me: ‘You are nothing, 
brother. Keep quiet – if you talk too much, I’ll give your stock away, all of 
it,’” said Adam.

 

“Even other police, I saw them come in the shops. They took Grandpa headache 
powder and airtime – everything. When we left, they said: ‘My friend, come 
here. Give us money for cool drink.’ I said I didn’t have money. They told me 
that if I didn’t give them money, they would leave. I gave him R200.

 

“There were five police cars. When the police were there, people were stealing. 
Police were standing there watching.”

 

Shukri Abdullahi (42), a shopkeeper in Meadowlands, Soweto, said looters 
assaulted her at the entrance to her shop in front of the police, who did 
nothing.

 

“When I asked for assistance, the police said I can go back to where I come 
from. There were a lot of people and they beat me up – the police did nothing.”

 

Fatima Hasan (27), whose brothers ran a shop in Slovoville, which was looted on 
Wednesday night, went to help them the next morning.

 

“I fell and hurt my leg because I ended up running away. The police abuse us 
because we are foreigners, they tell us to go away. They tell me: ‘You come 
here to make money in our South Africa.’ This is the fifth time this is 
happening to me, what can we do now? Even when we go to the clinic, sometimes 
they tell us to go back to our country.”

 

At an urgent meeting between Gauteng Premier David Makhura and foreign shop 
owners, which was attended by Gauteng Transport MEC Ismail Vadi, in Mayfair, 
Johannesburg, yesterday, Makhura reiterated the government line that this 
week’s action was “criminal and not xenophobic”.

 

He also assured shop owners that government and the police would do all they 
could to protect them and stop the anarchy.

 

“The indiscriminate looting in the shops is something we have condemned. We 
have told the police to find the looters, and already 160 people have been 
arrested,” Makhura said.

 

“What we saw in Soweto was not xenophobia, but criminal activity. And crime 
must be dealt with as crime because crime has no colour, class or gender.”

 

This week, a police officer was filmed apparently participating in looting in 
Dobsonville, Soweto.

 

City Press has learnt that a multidisciplinary task team, made up of the 
police’s tactical response team, public order policing units, detectives, crime 
intelligence and visible policing units has been established to find the 
instigators behind the unrest (see page 6).

 

Police spokesperson Solomon Makgale said on Friday night that a 13-month-old 
baby was trampled to death by looters in Kagiso.

 

“While people were looting one spaza shop, police arrived. The looters 
scattered. As they fled, some ran into a woman in her early 20s carrying a 
baby. In that commotion, the baby fell and was trampled by the fleeing mob. A 
case of murder is being investigated by Kagiso detectives,” he said.

 

In response to allegations of police collusion in the looting, Makgale said 
they knew of one case and had “taken the appropriate action in response”.

 

“There is absolutely nothing of this sort that has been brought to our 
attention. If there is evidence to corroborate these allegations, then we will 
certainly look into them and take action.”

 

Makgale said it was a pity that City Press decided to report a story containing 
“wild allegations” with “no shred of evidence”.

 

“Just because one police officer was shown on video looting, it does not mean 
every police officer who was out there was involved. If this story is 
published, then it will go down as the worst form of journalism I have ever 
seen,” he said.

 

Meanwhile, SA Spaza & Tuckshop Association president Rose Nkosi, whose 
organisation represents more than 3 000 stores around the country, said 
government should use the eviction of foreigners from Soweto as an opportunity 
to create jobs for local unemployed youth.

 

“These people are given spaces, but locals don’t have good places to sell. How 
do foreigners get good spots? That’s my first question, because we have 
officials at the border gates. How are these people coming in just like this?” 
she said at the home of 14-year-old Mthetheleli Mahori, whose death on Monday 
sparked the looting.

 

“We don’t want them back here, and the community has spoken. Rather let them go 
back to their countries and leave our country with freedom.”

 

Nkosi insisted that the spaza shops will reopen, “but only South Africans 
should run them”.

 

Meanwhile, City Press saw three elderly women begging police to allow them to 
buy bread for R9 as heavily armed police guarded a shop in Diepkloof.

 

One of the women, Victoria Mbambo, said she could not afford food from big 
retail shops because spazas sold cheaper goods.

 

“I know I will go hungry. Many others will go hungry. People do not think about 
tomorrow, they just think of today and come next week, they will be hungry and 
there won’t be anybody to give you food on credit like these people have been 
doing for years. That’s how many of us survive. What are we going to do now?”

 

 

From: http://www.citypress.co.za/news/cops-told-us-loot/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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