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Tevera Mucheka lost his bakkie and the house he has rented for over ten years in a xenophobic attack. Photo: Bernard Chiguvare

Zimbabweans leave after xenophobic attacks in Vuwani

 

By Bernard Chiguvare

“I miss my fellow Zimbabweans. We used to stay as a family but we are now scattered in Limpopo”

A number of Zimbabweans who had been living and working in Tshino village, Thohoyandou, Vuwani, have moved to other areas of Limpopo or returned to Zimbabwe after xenophobic violence erupted last month.

Spokesperson for SAPS in Limpopo Colonel Moatshe Ngoepe said about eight houses belonging to immigrants had been torched on the night of 17 March. Two suspects were arrested and are to appear in court on 25 April on charges of public violence, malicious damage to property and arson.

Some Zimbabweans were accommodated by their employers on farms in Levubu several kilometres away.

“I miss my fellow Zimbabweans. We used to stay as a family but we are now scattered in Limpopo,” said Tevera Mucheka. He lost his bakkie and the house he has rented for over ten years. He has now moved to Duthuni, 20km from Tshino village.

“I lost my Zimbabwean passport, driver’s licence and customers who usually brought cars for repairs,” said Mucheka, who is a mechanic.

“I have to start all over again … My previous employers donated clothes and food,” he said.

He did not know why his home was torched, but said the crowd had shouted that “they no longer want Zimbabweans around”.

“Since 2008, foreigners have been subjected to such attacks and we do not notice any meaningful intervention from the government,” he said.

Spokesperson for the Limpopo Premier, Kenny Mathivha, said, “Compared to other provinces, Limpopo has had less such attacks because of its integrated communities. For example, you can’t have such in Musina because South African citizens in Musina have relatives in Zimbabwe and speak same languages. In Giyani and Phalaborwa, it’s difficult to distinguish a Tsonga-speaking person from a South African or Mozambican; same with Lephalale – the Limpopo people in that area speak Setswana.”

He said the Department of Community Safety had been dealing with the attacks and liaising with the district municipality.

Vhembe District Mayor Mavhungu Lerule-Ramakhanya said immigrants should register any business operations with the council so there would be no question about them since they’d be ratepayers.

© 2019 GroundUp. 
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.  
https://www.groundup.org.za/article/zimbabweans-have-relocated-after-xenophobic-attacks-vuwani/

 

Date:26 April 2019

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