Document - South Africa: Amnesty International calls on government to protect those at risk of “xenophobic” attack
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
PUBLIC STATEMENT
AI index: AFR 53/007/2008
Date: 23 May 2008
South Africa: Amnesty International calls on government to
protect those at risk of “xenophobic” attack
Amnesty International today called on the South African government
to take all necessary measures to protect the human rights of
people at continuing risk of violent attacks and displacement from
their homes on the basis of their perceived ethnic origins or
status as “foreigners” or asylum-seekers.
The organization urged the government to ensure that those who have
been subjected to this violence and displacement have access to
humanitarian assistance, legal remedies and psycho-social support.
No deportations should be carried out without access to full and
fair asylum procedures and other full procedural guarantees. Law
enforcement agencies should take effective steps to investigate the
attacks and those responsible should be brought to justice.
Amnesty International condemns the human rights abuses that have
been and continue to be committed against individuals, families and
groups defined on the basis of their perceived identity or
status.
In the wave of killings, beatings, sexual assaults, looting and
destruction of property, the victims have been identified by the
perpetrators according to their alleged identity or status. This
violence has now occurred in at least five provinces, including
most currently in the Durban and Cape Town areas.
Amnesty International acknowledges that members of the government
have publicly denounced the violence and are taking some steps to
improve the coordination and level of security response to it. All
members of the security forces carrying out law enforcement duties,
including any members of the armed forces, should comply with the
UN Code of Conduct and the UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force
and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials. In conjunction with the
commendable work of non-governmental service-providing
organizations there also has been an improvement in the official
responses to humanitarian needs of the many thousands displaced by
the violence.
Members of government at national and provincial levels and leading
ANC officials have publicly referred to possibly
politically-motivated, organized, ‘third force’ origins of this
violence. Whatever may be the factual basis for these views,
Amnesty International urges that any official inquiry into the
violence be independent and impartial and investigate fully, among
other things, any evidence of negligence by law enforcement
officials either in the form of failures to act on information
provided to them about threats or planned attacks and/or their
having turned a ‘blind eye’ to actual attacks.
In addition, the inquiry should examine the role of possible
contributory factors to the violence. These include the
longstanding pattern of discriminatory practices and attitudes
shown towards asylum-seekers, refugees and migrants by officials,
including from the Department of Home Affairs (DHA), the police
services and also the magistracy.
Legal and advocacy organizations, including Amnesty International,
have repeatedly raised with the government their concerns that
these practices and attitudes result in effective denial of access
to asylum determination procedures, place individuals at risk of
arbitrary arrest, unlawful deportation, or forcible return to their
countries of origin where they may be subjected to further human
rights violations. In addition, an implicit official denial that
Zimbabweans in South Africa may be in need of international
protection may also have contributed to the hostility towards this
group, who have been targeted in the current violence.
Amnesty International is also concerned that those responsible for
earlier incidents of attacks on individuals or businesses owned by
non-South Africans, including as recently as March 2008, do
not appear to have been brought to justice -- thereby contributing
to a climate of impunity for these abuses. Moreover, there appear
also to have been no disciplinary or other measures taken against
police officers who were involved in a high profile police raid on
Johannesburg’s Central Methodist Church on 31 January this year,
during which hundreds of migrants, asylum-seekers and refugees
sheltering at the church were subjected to arbitrary arrest and in
some cases excessive force by police. They also were subjected to
delays in access to necessary medical treatment for chronic
illnesses or injuries received at the hands of the police. Some of
those arrested were also unlawfully detained due to the improper
and prejudiced conduct of the magistrate who presided over bail
hearings.
While the national Minister of Home Affairs publicly stated that
no-one affected by the violence should be subjected to
deportations, Amnesty International has received reports of
deportations occurring, including allegedly involuntary ones.
Amnesty International urges the Minister and the DHA to ensure, in
cooperation with other relevant departments and service-providers,
that any person displaced or otherwise affected directly by the
violence should receive counselling support and legal and other
advice to enable them to make an informed decision about whether
they wish to return to their country of origin. This measure is
particularly important in the case of those individuals who had
already applied or attempted to apply for asylum or have received
refugee status.
Finally, Amnesty International urges the national Minister of
Social Development to exercise his discretion under section 5 of
the Social Assistance Act of 2004 to ensure that all those
displaced by the violence, irrespective of their citizenship
status, are able to receive emergency assistance grants.