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Uneasy calm in Johannesburg after anti-immigrant riots

By Editorial board
20 April 2015   |   4:31 am
AN uneasy calm prevails in South Africa’s financial hub, Johannesburg, on the third day since violence against foreigners erupted in the city.
A local taxi driver pelts with stones a man on the ground during a confrontation with foreign nationals in the Johannesburg Central Business District on April 15, 2015. AFP PHOTO/MARCO LONGARI
A local taxi driver pelts with stones a man on the ground during a confrontation with foreign nationals in the Johannesburg Central Business District on April 15, 2015. AFP PHOTO/MARCO LONGARI

AN uneasy calm prevails in South Africa’s financial hub, Johannesburg, on the third day since violence against foreigners erupted in the city.

People were on alert yesterday for further incidents after the city saw an outbreak of anti-immigrant attacks in certain neighbourhoods.

At least six people have been killed and more than 1,000 people displaced after violence against foreign nationals flared up on March 30 in the country’s coastal province of KwaZulu-Natal.

The attacks soon spread inland to the country’s financial hub, Johannesburg, in Gauteng province.

Lieutenant Colonel Lungelo Dlamini told Al Jazeera that Johannesburg was very quiet yesterday.

He said that no violent incidents over night or yesterday.

“There are enough officers deployed and the situation has been stabilised,” he said.

On Saturday, two more people were reported killed, bringing the death toll in the latest wave of attacks to eight, South African police said.

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