Chaos in Cape Town as refugees evicted from city centre protest

Court order against protesters outside UN High Commissioner for Refugees

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A women lifts her hands that was dippid in red coloured water which is used by the police water canon. She said that it resembles “blood”.
A woman lifts her hands which were dipped in red coloured water used by the police water cannon. She said that it resembled “blood”.

Refugees camped outside the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Cape Town were evicted by police on Wednesday with stun grenades, rubber bullets and water cannons. Some mothers were separated from their children.

At 11am on Wednesday the South African Police Service (SAPS) blocked off Burg Street and began removing the refugees who have lived outside the Waldorf Arcade for the past three weeks. They have been demanding that the UNHCR help them leave South Africa because of xenophobic violence.

Refugees and asylum seekers chant “No more South Africa” and “We want to go” while being evicted from the UNHCR offices.

Rwandan refugee Francine Iturushi Imbabazi said she had been separated from her two young children in the chaos.

“The police were fighting and trying to catch me.” She says when she told the police officers she was looking for her children, she was told to shut up and she was manhandled. She is six-months pregnant. She told GroundUp she did not know where her children were. They are three years and one year and seven months old.

Police use a water cannon to disperse protesters.

After broadcasting a warning, police sprayed refugees with water cannons. People ran for cover. Some were dragged away by police and put into trucks.

Congolese refugee Vanessa Tshipadi, who is 20, said her mother’s clothes had been torn and the younger children had been taken away.

One woman showed GroundUp a video of a man with a bloodied face in the back of a police truck. Some people were taken away on stretchers.

Congolese refugee Evonne Meta, hugging her child, said, “The police come with their water and they hit people. They tear my clothes. We don’t have any place to go with our kids. I have five kids.”

Women and children congregated in the Methodist church across the street. Two men embraced, sobbing.

In a statement, the office of the Provincial Commissioner of Police said about 100 people had been arrested “after they failed to heed the call to disperse”.

“The police are in the area to support the sheriff in executing a court order to evict about 300 refugees and asylum seekers who have been occupying the building in a sit-in protest for quite some time,” said the statement. “The court order was granted on 18 October at the Cape Town Magistrates Court after the landlord made an application to evict the group.”

The statement said law enforcement officers and officials from the departments of Social Development and Home Affairs were also present.

According to police, 100 people were arrested.

Commissioner Chris Nissen of the South African Human Rights Commission said his office had held meetings with the refugees. Asked about the violence today, he said a SAPS colonel had told him “minimum force was used”.

“Obviously, we need to do our assessment and investigation into what happened.”

Regarding the demands of the protestors, Nissen said, “We must also understand there are protocols involved in different countries. You can’t just take people from here and take them elsewhere.”

Reports are still circulating that children are missing. One refugee told GroundUp that mothers had been told to go to the police station to look for their children, but SAPS media spokesperson Brigadier Novela Potelwa said there are no missing children at the police station. She also said if there are mothers who have lost children, they should open a missing persons case at the police station and the police will assist them.

About 300 refugees and asylum seekers have been camping outside the UNHCR offices for three weeks.

An exasperated man cries out at the police.

A woman is taken away by medics. According to protesters, she fainted during the eviction.

As police asked protesters to clear the area, a refugee in tears said that he had already lost his brother and he was willing to die himself.

A woman lies on the ground during the eviction. Protesters used a plastic sheet to protect her from the water being sprayed by the police water cannon.

Refugees and asylum seekers carry out their belongings.

A woman in tears said that she was separated from her seven-month-old baby during the eviction.

Refugees are seen leaving whilst police cordon off the area.

TOPICS:  Immigration

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