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Rampaging strikers loot shops, trash cars

2006-05-16 14:53
line

Cape Town - Police fired rubber bullets and stun grenades to disperse striking security guards who went on the rampage in central Cape Town and outside parliament on Tuesday.

Several injuries were reported and dozens of shop windows were broken, goods looted, and cars trashed as about 5 000 strikers made their way to parliament to hand over a memorandum in support of wage and working conditions demands.

At least one journalist covering the march, under the banner of the SA Allied and Transport Workers Union (Satawu), was assaulted by protesters.

After handing the memorandum to officials at parliament, the group started breaking up, running in different directions, pursued by police.

Shots fired

Several shots were fired and police were seen making arrests, as a helicopter circled overhead.

Further shots from around the city centre could be heard for some time afterwards.

An eyewitness told Sapa strikers running down Buitenkant Street had tried to set a car alight, and police fired rubber bullets.

One marcher struck by what appeared to be a rubber bullet, "went down like a ton of bricks", he said.

A Sapa reporter at the scene said there were hardly any shops without broken windows along the two blocks of Roeland Street from the entrance to parliament.

Marchers, many armed with steel pipes, sticks and pick-axe handles, ripped windscreen wipers and mirrors off cars parked in Plein Street outside parliament, and smashed windows of cars and shops, grabbing merchandise.

Some used uprooted road signs to vandalise cars, while other kicked in doors. Their fellow marchers ignored them.

Others were seen making threatening gestures at bystanders; one dragging his finger across his throat, pointing at security staff on duty at one of the entrances to parliament.

'We'll be back'

"We'll be back," marchers told a shop-owner as they shattered his shop window.

Western Cape Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu) secretary Tony Ehrenreich addressed the crowd outside the main gates, calling for marchers to be disciplined.

Only metres away from the platform on which he stood, glass from broken shop and vehicle windows lay mixed with litter from overturned wastebins.

Independent Democrats leader Patricia de Lille and councillor Simon Grindrod took cover behind the steel gates of a Plein Street entrance to parliament as strikers threw stones at the adjacent buildings.

"I think this strike has gone on too long. People are beginning to lose sympathy with the strikers," she told Sapa.

"A solution must be found. Labour Minister Membathisi Mdladlana must intervene," she said.

'It's pathetic

A worker at an internet cafe in Roeland Street expressed his disgust at the strikers' conduct as he cleared away broken glass.

"I think it's pathetic," he said. "I think it (the strike) must end now, or they must give people the percentage (wage increase the strikers are asking for)."

It was not right for other people's business to bear the brunt of the strikers' discontent, he added.

Shocked car owners, meanwhile, shook their heads in disbelief as they approached their smashed vehicles.

One man was seen wiping broken glass from the driver seat and shaking out the floor mat as his female companion kept wiping her eyes and onlookers gathered around.

He then banged the driver's door shut in apparent anger and sped off as a smattering of security guards scattered out of the way.

Groups of marchers laughed, danced and clapped hands as shaken car owners fetched their mangled vehicles from among the crowd and drove off.

Police captain Randall Stoffels said initial, unconfirmed reports were that about 100 vehicles were damaged by the strikers.

Cars were damaged in Keizergracht, Darling, Plein, Roeland and Buitenkant streets.

Injuries had been reported on the part of strikers and police, but Stoffels had no immediate detail on that, nor on the extent of damage to shops.

He said arrests were made, but did not have numbers.

Journalist attacked

Stoffels said the strikers were still dispersing to train stations and bus depots around town after 14:00. Police were keeping a close watch on them.

Earlier, a Sapa journalist was attacked by protesters as he was covering their march through the city centre.

Reporter Wendell Roelf was hit on the head with a sjambok, suffered a deep gash to one leg, and pelted with rocks. He was taken to hospital, where his leg was stitched.

Soon after the start of the march, police acted against marchers as they overturned food and vegetable stalls.

Shops close doors

The marchers were a breakaway group from the main body.

The incident occurred outside the Grand Central shopping complex.

Many shops in the city centre shut their doors, and hawkers packed up their stalls, in anticipation of the march.

Previous Satawu marches in Cape Town and other cities have been marred by violence by striking guards, who are pressing for a better pay deal.

Earlier on Tuesday, Satawu said the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) had called on the guards to halt their month-long protest.

- SAPA

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Latest comment in South Africa

blipsie says... Max Coleman's authoritative book analyses all deaths due to political violence from 1948 to 1994 in South Africa and Namibia. According to the HRC statistics, 21,000 people died in political violence in South Africa during apartheid - of whom 14,000 people died during the six-year transition process from 1990 to 1994. The book lists the number of incidents, dates, and those involved.This includes SA Defence Force actions, for instance the 600 deaths at Kassinga in Angola during the war in 1978. Of those deaths, the vast majority, 92%, have been primarily due to Africans killing Africans -- such as the inter-tribal battles for territory: this book's detailed analyses of the period June 1990 to July 1993 indicates a total of 8580 (92%) of the 9,325 violent deaths during the period June 1990 to July 1993 were caused by Africans killing Africans, or as the news media often calls it, "Black on Black" violence - hostel killings, Inkatha Freedom Party versus ANC killlings, and taxi and turf war violence. The activities of the Civil Cooperation Bureau as outlined by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, were also included in these figures. The security forces caused 518 deaths (5.6%) throughout this period. Read the article...

 
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