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SAfrica police raid Zimbabwean refugee sanctuary
31 Jan 2008 06:09:26 GMT
Source: Reuters
JOHANNESBURG, Jan 31 (Reuters) - South African police have raided a church that was a sanctuary for Zimbabwean refugees, arresting scores of suspected illegal immigrants, the South African Broadcasting Corp. said on Thursday.

The raid occurred around midnight on Wednesday at the Central Methodist Church in downtown Johannesburg, which had become a virtual refugee camp for those fleeing an economic crisis in Zimbabwe, the public broadcaster said.

About 1,000 Zimbabweans were staying in the church's homeless shelter, with the blessing of church officials. They slept on mats in the corridors, foyer, meeting rooms and outside the building and were fed each day.

Bishop Paul Verryn, who has been at the forefront of the church's effort to look after the refugees and asylum seekers, accused the police of using excessive force on church workers and those staying at the shelter.

"They did not have a warrant," Verryn told SABC. "They have pushed me around and treated us despicably." Verryn said pregnant women were among those targeted in the police raid. Police officials were not immediately available for comment.

Zimbabwe is struggling with an economic meltdown, marked by soaring poverty and inflation, unemployment of around 80 percent and chronic shortages of food, fuel, water, electricity and hard currency.

An estimated 4,000 Zimbabweans cross into neighbouring South Africa each day to look for food and work. Many come to Johannesburg, the centre of South Africa's booming economy, where they have relatives and can often find jobs.

The arrivals, however, have stirred resentment among some South Africans, who blame them for contributing to the country's high levels of violent crime and of stealing jobs from locals. (Reporting by Paul Simao; Editing by Alison Williams)


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Kenya's President Mwai Kibaki (R) addresses a gathering after launching humanitarian fund to help 300,000 refugees from the violence in Nairobi, January 30, 2008. Kibaki urged victims of violence to avoid ...



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Last updated:Thu Jan 31 06:07:22 2008