Thousands of Malawians flee homes in South Africa amid xenophobic threats
More than 3,000 Malawians, including hundreds of children, are staying in an open field in South Africaโs port city of Durban, after fleeing what they described as escalating anti-immigrant threats and attacks. For weeks, groups armed with sticks, whips and shields have marched
More than 3,000 Malawians, including hundreds of children, are staying in an open field in South Africaโs port city of Durban, after fleeing what they described as escalating anti-immigrant threats and attacks.
For weeks, groups armed with sticks, whips and shields have marched through parts of the country demanding that foreigners with no papers leave by June 30.
At the park, which transformed into a makeshift transit camp in Durban on Wednesday, many people said repatriation was their only safe option.
โItโs hard to stay here,โ Falesi Chukuwumba, a Malawian national, told Al Jazeera. โYou can see we are outside. How can we stay in this cold? Our children can get sick.โ
Sayiba John, 33, a Malawian who fled Nazareth township with her husband and three children, told the AFP news agency her daughter, a Grade 2 pupil, was forced to abandon her exams.
โThey said we must go. We have no choice in the matter,โ John said. โItโs better our government take us away from here than to face the anger of the South Africans.โ
Ellen Mwamulima, a 45-year-old widow, mother of three and former domestic worker in Mossel Bay in the Western Cape, fled a mob who nearly caught up with her and had to hide out in the bush for two weeks.
โItโs been very difficult because we lost everything, they burnt our houses and all our belongings,โ the Malawian told Al Jazeera.

