Verryn reports xenophobic threats
2010-07-13 18:13
Johannesburg - Bishop Paul Verryn has received threats against himself and foreign nationals living at the Central Methodist Church in Johannesburg, he said on Tuesday.
"There had been some direct threats," the cleric told reporters.
Verryn said a man approached him at a traffic light on the corner of Republic and William Nichol roads in northern Johannesburg on Sunday and told him: "We want you to know if it (xenophobic violence) starts, we will be coming to the church."
Verryn said it was clear that this was meant as a threat.
He had also been told that people plotted, during an event celebrating Youth Day on June 16, to attack his house in Soweto.
On Monday night, foreigners at the church said they had been threatened by metro police officers.
"The metro police had come (to the church) and said they would be coming for the people," said Verryn, whose church is known to be a haven for homeless foreign nationals.
As he left the church to go home, he confronted metro officers sitting in a vehicle outside. The officers told him they were there to clamp down on illegal street trading.
Verryn was speaking to the media in Johannesburg alongside Zimbabwe's opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and several other civil society groups.
The MDC's spokesperson in South Africa, Sibanengi Dube, said the party had received more than 200 calls from distressed Zimbabweans fearing xenophobic attacks.
"Since Sunday, we've been receiving calls... I received 207 calls from members of the party who say they can't go home," said Dube.
The calls were from all corners of the country, but most of them came from the Western Cape.
"I received calls of individuals who claimed to have been beaten up," said Dube.
In the Western Cape, attacks and shop lootings were reported in Daveyton, Cape Town, Philippi, Nyanga, Khayelitsha, Paarl East, Wellington, Mbekweni and Klapmuts.
- SAPA