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People run away as a South African Police Services armoured vehicle
drives into a street during clashes with residents of Tafelsig, an
impoverished suburb in Mitchells Plain, near Cape Town, on April 14,
2020, after some people in the community did not receive food parcels
which were being handed out as part of the support for this community
during the nation wide lockdown to curb the spread of the COVID-19
coronavirus. (Photo by RODGER BOSCH / AFP) |
South African police
on Tuesday fired rubber bullets and teargas in clashes with Cape Town
township residents protesting over access to food aid during a
coronavirus lockdown.
Hundreds of angry people fought running
battles with the police, hurling rocks and setting up barricades on the
streets with burning tyres in Mitchells Plain over undelivered food
parcels.
“We have small children. We want to eat. They must also eat,” said resident and mother Nazile Bobbs.
“They said we are going to get parcels, where (are) the parcels? How long are we (going to be) in the lockdown?”
South
Africa is currently in the middle of a five-week lockdown to curb the
spread of coronavirus which has so far infected more than 2,400 people.
President Cyril Ramaphosa has promised to provide basics such as water and food supplies to the poorest South Africans.
Many
people, especially those working in the informal economy, are unable to
ply their trade and have lost income due to the lockdown which came
into effect on March 27.
Community leader Liezl Manual said people came out of their homes “frustrated wanting to know” where the food parcels were.
“I
don’t think Ramaphosa is doing something,” said another resident Denise
Martin, adding that people would “rather die of coronavirus than to die
in our homes of hunger”.
Some government officials were starting
to become overwhelmed by the surging needs in a country ranked among
one of the world’s most unequal.
“People are so desperate for aid
such that even those people that would not be provided by us think they
can get support from us,” Busisiwe Memela-Khambula CEO of SA Social
Security Agency (Sassa), a government department responsible for
distributing food aid.
The department normally helps people with
disability, those who failed to access their social security grants or
those generally experiencing hardships, she said.
“But unfortunately now everybody is experiencing hardships,” she said on local television.
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