UN rights chief Pillay
slams xenophobic attacks in South Africa
(Malaysia, October
09,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay has condemned
the brutal slaying of a Somali family in South Africa and
urged the government to take measures to protect
foreigners from xenophobic attacks.
Sahra Omar Farah, her two teenage sons, one of whom was
deaf and her 12-year-old daughter were stabbed to death
Friday in a frenzied attack at a small store run by fellow
Somalis in rural Eastern Cape province.
Initial signs showed the woman and her daughter had also
been sexually assaulted.
'Xenophobic attacks unfortunately occur regularly in quite
a few countries, but this is one of the most vicious
examples we have heard of recently, outside war zones,'
South African-born Pillay said in a statement Tuesday.
The deaths were all the more tragic given that the family
had fled fighting in Somalia for what they believed was
the safety of South Africa, Pillay said.
The so-called Rainbow Nation has been gripped by rising
xenophobia in recent years, peaking in May in a two-week
orgy of violence against foreigners.
Over 62 people were killed and tens of thousands of others
displaced, when residents of squatter camps and townships
turned on African migrants living in their midst, accusing
them of taking their jobs, housing and women and/or being
involved in crime.
The attacks also provided a cover for widespread looting
and destruction of the migrants' property.
Before that outbreak, Somali shopowners in particularly
had been regularly attacked in recurring, sporadic
incidents around the country.
As South Africa closes the last of the temporary camps set
up to accommodate refugees from May's attacks, Pillay
warned: 'The authorities should take particular care not
to place those still in camps after the May violence back
into dangerous situations.'
Source:
IANS
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