Xenophobia in South Africa: why is there so much hatred for foreigners?

An outbreak of xenophobic violence and looting in the South African city of Durban has left at least five people dead, including a teenage boy.

The government has condemned the attacks, saying South Africans should "hang our heads in shame in the face of these misguided and misplaced assaults".

The country has a long and bloody history of xenophobia, with the recent violence reminiscent of vicious attacks on foreigners in 2008 which left more than 60 people dead.

What has happened?

Locals attacked foreigners, particularly targeting Malawians, Zimbabweans, Ethiopians and Mozambicans, in several townships in and around the city. Some of the victims were reportedly stabbed and one man was burned alive. Police used stun grenades, water cannons and rubber bullets to disperse the angry mob looting foreign-owned businesses, while owners were forced to arm themselves with machetes, axes and sticks.

Thousands of people have been displaced, seeking refuge at police stations, churches and temporary accommodation set up by NGOs. "Please help us. They want to kill us," Ethiopian shop owner Aka Bob Amaha told Times Live reporters. "We can't stay in our shops waiting for them to burn us."
Why?

South Africa has experienced waves of xenophobic attacks in recent years, but the recent flare-up in violence has been linked to comments made by Zulu King Zwelithini. Commentators accused him of inciting racial hatred after he delivered a speech telling foreigners to leave the country last month. They "dirty our streets" and their "unsightly goods [are] hanging all over our shops" he told cheering supporters in Durban. "We ask foreign nationals to pack their belongings and go back to their countries."

His call to deport foreigners was backed up by President Jacob Zuma's son Edward, who said South Africa was "sitting on a ticking time bomb". Despite a public backlash, Edward Zuma has refused to apologise for his comments. "People think that I am being xenophobic, but I am not, I am just trying to make a point that we have a problem," he told News 24.

Attackers accuse foreign migrants of stealing their jobs, blaming them for high levels of unemployment and crime in the township areas. The attacks have been fuelled by a sense of hatred, but also by jealousy and resentment.

But attitudes go even deeper than that. The current situation is a "hangover from the past, fuelled by the present," argues Sibusiso Tshabalala in Quartz. The high levels of xenophobia reflect the country's history of isolation from the rest of Africa, a by-product of Apartheid which continues to reinforce a dangerous "us and them" attitude.

What has the response been?

The Malawian government has announced it would repatriate its citizens from South Africa as the violence intensified, while neighbouring Mozambique set up border camps to cope with the "exodus of its citizens", the BBC reports.

The South African government and police have been criticised for their reluctance to describe the attacks as xenophobic, instead suggesting that they were based on "ideological differences" and insisting that the situation is under control.

"We need to realise that we are dealing with an urgent crisis," said Trish Erasmus, head of the Lawyers for Human Rights refugee and migrant rights programme. "We need a more coherent and decisive response from the government."

Thousands of people have taken part in a "peace march" through the streets of Durban, standing in solidarity with foreigners and calling for an immediate end to the attacks and discrimination.

"[The increase in xenophobia] is something to be worried about," said Ingrid Palmary, an associate professor at the Wits African Centre for Migration and Society. "We must ask: if it's so easy for the fundamental rights of one group to be trampled, who is next?"