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Herman Mashaba still scot-free as attacks erupt


Govan Whittles, Mail and Guardian, Johannesburg, 23 February 2017

The Democratic Alliance has taken no steps against Johannesburg mayor Herman 
Mashaba after he called foreigners illegally in the country "criminals" and 
said they are "messing up" the city, even though the South African Human Rights 
Commission has now announced an investigation.

The past two weeks have seen a spike in attacks on foreign-owned shops and 
houses in Gauteng.

On Wednesday, the commission confirmed that it has launched an official 
investigation into whether Mashaba incited the recent attacks on the property 
of foreigners. It follows a complaint by a member of the public and accusations 
by Lawyers for Human Rights that Mashaba is to blame for the xenophobic 
violence that spread to Pretoria West this week.

SAHRC investigating

"We are investigating the case and trying to gather the facts about what was 
actually said," commission spokesperson Gushwell Brooks said.

In an informal Mail & Guardian survey in one of the areas where violence has 
flared up against foreign shop owners, residents blamed criminality instead of 
xenophobia for the looting.

The DA will not take any action unless the commission makes a finding, said the 
party's Gauteng chairperson, John Moodey.

"When he spoke about the illegality of people without papers, we have to look 
at it in context. Unless the [commission] comes up with something else that 
implicates him and comes up with evidence that he has transgressed the law, we 
won't contemplate taking action."

The party's highest decision-making structure, its federal council, has not 
discussed any of Mashaba's comments and will not contemplate taking 
disciplinary action against him unless the commission proves that he incited 
xenophobic attacks, DA federal chairperson James Selfe said this week.

"It hasn't been raised with me and it hasn't been raised in the federal 
council," he said.

Selfe said the party's policy is to wait for the outcome of commission 
investigations but he believes "in the first instance, one would expect law 
enforcement to do its job and contain the situation".

But there are signs that senior leaders in the party disagree with Mashaba's 
statements and believe he should be investigated internally. "It merits some 
kind of investigation; it can't just be brushed off," said one senior member of 
the party, who spoke to the M&G on condition of anonymity.

Don't play with matches when the grass is dry

The DA's former deputy federal chairperson and current member of the Gauteng 
legislature, Makashule Gana, has previously criticised Mashaba's comments, 
warning that they would create tension. This week, he again warned that "it's 
easy to label people as criminals but once you get into that terrain, you are 
inviting mob justice".

"It's dangerous, in fact, when people make such statements. You must not play 
with matches when the grass is dry. When you have ordinary South Africans 
putting themselves as judges and juries about who can and can't be in the 
country, you are treading on dangerous ground," he added.

On whether Mashaba should be disciplined, he said: "I'm not in the leadership, 
so I can't decide. Those that are elected to deal with such matters, they will 
deal with it."

The commission's Brooks says whether Mashaba can be linked to the Tshwane 
violence "will depend on whether there is any evidence that residents engaged 
in xenophobic violence mentioned his comments as the reason for their actions".

No reason, but criminality

Residents of Lotus Gardens, Tshwane - where foreign-owned shops were looted 
over the weekend - made no mention of Mashaba.

"Criminals don't need a reason to do crime. All that's happening now is because 
people are complaining about Nigerians and drugs, they [criminals] have an 
excuse. That's why you see them breaking into shops," George Ramokele said, 
standing outside his spaza shop selling fruit and vegetables.

Five metres away, a group of young men were huddled under a veranda smoking 
dagga in front of a foreign-owned spaza shop. The shop was closed and evacuated 
after being targeted in a looting spree the previous night. Only two shops 
remained open on the township's Desmond Tutu Street: a tavern and a 
buy-and-braai, both owned by locals.

The looting followed similar scenes across WF Nkomo Street in neighbouring 
Atteridgeville, where "Death to drug dealers" is spray-painted in capital 
letters across a wall. Police said 30 shops were looted, damaged or had stock 
evacuated in the violence that took place under the guise of xenophobia.

"For control"

Asked why the looting took place, two young men said: "We just did it for 
control", before trying to sell what appeared to be looted goods to the M&G.

Over the weekend, two Pretoria West homes belonging to Nigerians were torched. 
As the homes burned, a cellphone video captured a confrontation between the 
bishop of the Celestial Church of Christ and a group of residents. The church 
is based in Nigeria and has branches across the continent.

"We have been here for over 12 years; we pray for South Africans. We have 
branches all over," the bishop says. When asked how he earns money, he says: "I 
have a business, a salon."

"Ah, fuck you!" a local retorts. "How many salons do you have?" asks another 
resident, before a voice is heard pleading with the crowd to leave the pastor 
alone. Then former ward councillor Joyce Mabena yells: "Don't tell us we are 
aggressive. We went inside the church, we wanted to ask where is the drugs. You 
wanted to fight with us."

The video cuts and then resumes with the pastor's arm heavily bandaged and his 
shirt covered in blood.

Loot sold for drugs

Ramokele dismissed suggestions that his fellow Lotus Gardens residents feel 
contempt towards foreigners. Pakistanis and Somalis have settled in the area in 
fairly large groups, he says, but "they honestly don't sell any drugs. They fix 
phones and televisions, which we can't do ourselves. I actually think they are 
very helpful."

He also did not believe that foreign-owned spaza shops were being looted by 
poor South Africans. "They don't even take that stuff home. They sell it for 
drugs, man. I'm telling you. They come to anyone who will buy just to get 
money," he added.

On Tuesday, a handful of shops remained open in Lotus Gardens. The owner of the 
house from which a Malawian runs his shop said he was scared he would be 
targeted. "I don't want them to come and burn my house. It's best to keep it 
closed for now," said the man, who did not want to be identified.

Groups of young men loitered and attempted to pick the locks of the unguarded 
shops. Police said looting flared up again in the township on Tuesday night but 
that no arrests were made.


From: 
http://mg.co.za/article/2017-02-23-00-mashaba-still-scot-free-as-attacks-erupt






























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