TheTimes.jpg

 

 

More than 180 arrests in raid on Thembelihle informal settlement

 

 

RDM News Wire, The Times, Johannesburg, 30 April, 2015

 

Police, metro cops, army and home affairs officials descended on the
Thembelihle informal settlement near Lenasia on Thursday morning.

 

Police spokesperson Lieutenant Kay Makhubela, who said Thembelihle had been
identified as a hotspot for violent crimes, told RDM News Wire that, at the
time of publication, more than 180 people, including illegal immigrants, had
been taken into custody.

 

"It's more than that [180], much more, and we expect to make many more
arrests for various crimes during the course of the day," said Makhubela.
"We will be here the whole day."

 

A media briefing with arrest statistics is expected to held later on
Thursday.

 

The military was recently drafted in to assist the police in quelling the
xenophobic violence in the townships, and restoring peace.

 

But no attacks on foreign nationals had been reported in Thembelihle during
the recent xenophobic outbreak, although the area had last month been the
site of a spate of violent service delivery protests.

 

Dozens of arrests were made at the time after community buildings and a
police station were torched.

 

Thursday's raid comes two days after the release of a statement by the
Gauteng provincial government trumpeting "the approval and formal
registration of Thembelihle as a housing project".

 

"Thembelihle will now receive dedicated government support, provision of
services including housing and related infrastructure such as water and
electricity," the statement read.

 

"The registration of Thembelihle as a housing project is a key milestone in
the history of Thembelihle," human settlements MEC Jacob Mamabolo said.

 

"Although we are rendering some services to enable residents to meet their
daily needs, it has become imperative to plan better and to manage the
informal settlement as a formal project because of the growing needs,
demands and challenges in the area."

 

Thursday's raids come hours after president Jacob Zuma reportedly won the
support of his Southern African Development Community (SADC) counterparts on
Wednesday for his government's handling of recent attacks on foreign
migrants.

 

According to Business Day, SADC executive secretary Dr Stergomena Tax said
Zuma had briefed regional leaders about the attacks, and "his government's
efforts to curb the violence, including sending in the military to assist
the police in quelling the xenophobic violence in the townships affected".

 

This, however, was in contrast to Thursday's edition of Mail & Guardian,
which reported that a "gatvol" Zuma and his Cabinet's "new hardened
attitude" towards illegal immigrants is: "don't kill them but deport them".

 

"Searches and deportations of illegal immigrants are likely to be a daily
occurrence and government sources say the expected costs justify the end,"
the newspaper reported, adding that the clampdown on illegal immigrations
was "triggered largely by the diplomatic fallout between SA and some African
countries".

 

 

From:
http://www.timeslive.co.za/local/2015/04/30/more-than-180-arrests-in-raid-on
-thembelihle-informal-settlement

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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