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Tag: South African

  • Anti-migrant group ordered to stop blocking foreigners from South African healthcare

    A South African court has ordered an anti-migrant group to stop blocking foreign nationals from accessing public health facilities and schools, saying such actions are illegal.

    Operation Dudula has in recent months picketed hospitals and clinics in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal provinces, checking identity cards and stopping anyone who is not South African from entering. This has since extended to schools.

    But the high court in Johannesburg has ordered the group to stop “intimidating, harassing [or] interfering with access” to these facilities.

    South Africa is home to about 2.4 million migrants, just less than 4% of the population, according to official figures.

    Most come from neighbouring countries such as Lesotho, Zimbabwe and Mozambique, which have a history of providing migrant labour to their wealthy neighbour.

    Xenophobia has long been an issue in South Africa, which has been accompanied by occasional outbursts of deadly violence, and anti-migrant sentiment has become a key political talking-point.

    Judge Leicester Adams, handing down judgment on Tuesday, also barred Operation Dudula from making statements that can be construed as hate speech, “unlawfully evicting foreign nationals from their homes… [or] from their trading stalls” and instigating others to do so.

    “Dudula” means to remove something by force in the Zulu language.

    The organisation says it is disappointed by the ruling and intends to appeal against it, according to South African online publication News24.

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  • Forty-two killed as bus crashes on South Africa mountain pass

    Forty-two Zimbabwean and Malawian nationals have died after a bus taking them home overturned on a South African road, authorities have said.

    The crash happened on Sunday night as the bus was moving through “a mountainous section” of the N1 highway in South Africa’s Limpopo province, local transport officials said.

    “It [then] veered off the road along a steep mountain pass and plunged down an embankment,” they added.

    South African President Cyril Ramaphosa mourned the high death toll, which includes seven children, and said this was not only a tragedy for the country but for “our sister states of Zimbabwe and Malawi” as well.

    The cause of the accident is unknown but an investigation has been launched.

    According to reports, the bus was travelling from the city of Gqeberha in the Eastern Cape.

    It is not clear how many people were travelling on the bus when it crashed, or its capacity.

    As well as the seven children, 18 women and 17 men died, while 49 people were injured, authorities confirmed.

    Government officials, including Transport Minister Barbara Creecy, are set to visit the scene of the crash as well as the injured passengers.

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  • Boxing boots, Yoruba festivals and trombones: Africa’s top shots

    A selection of the week’s best photos from across the African continent and beyond:

    A model in Kenya is photographed on Saturday in a boxing ring ahead of a tournament to mark International Youth Day in Mathare slum in the capital, Nairobi. [Daniel Irungu/Shutterstock/EPA]

    Protesters walking along the beach carrying Extinction Rebellion flags and a banner with the following words written on it "Kick Total Out Of Africa". The protesters are making kicking motions and have large mock shoes on - Tuesday 19 August 2025.

    There are big kicks in Cape Town on Tuesday as South African climate activists call for Total to be kicked out of Africa. The energy giant has not responded the campaign but describes itself as committed to providing sustainable energy. [Brenton Geach/Gallo Images/Getty Images]

    Mia le Roux smiles whilst wearing a white blazer, gold earrings and her hair in a up-do - Friday 15 August 2025.

    Mia le Roux, who became the first deaf woman to be crowned Miss South Africa last year, smiles for cameras in the capital, Pretoria, on Friday as she attends a national dialogue convention that seeks to identify the most important issues facing the country. [Frennie Shivambu/Gallo Images/Getty Images]

    A man in a blue T-shirt tipping a red crate of potatoes into his market display. There is a large pile of potatoes in front of him - Sunday 17 August 2025.

    Potatoes abound at this food market on Sunday as a trader replenishes his potato stock in Algeria’s capital, Algiers. [Billel Bensalem/APP/NurPhoto/Getty Images]

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    A man blows his trombone against a background of blue skies, whilst wearing red, yellow and white face and body paint - Monday 18 August 2025.

    The next day in Wasiko, Uganda, a trombone player blows his horn before a football tournament game at the Africa Nations Championship (Chan), where Uganda faced off South Africa in a group stage match. [Badru Katumba/AFP/Getty Images]

    Football fans sitting outside on a grassy area. Some are smiling and others on their phone - Sunday 17 August 2025.

    There are smiles on Sunday at a fan zone in Nairobi set up for Kenyan football fans to watch their team take on Zambia in a Chan match. [Donwilson Odhiambo/Getty Images]

    Young boys wearing red and white patterned traditional Yoruba clothes stand in front of men carrying what looks like sticks. Some of the men behind are wearing red and white clothing also - Wednesday 20 August 2025.

    On Wednesday, these young children in Nigeria's city of Lagos participate in festivities on Isese Day, when Yoruba traditions are celebrated. [Adekunle Ajayi/NurPhoto/Getty Images]

    A woman wearing a red-checked traditional outfit spreads her arms to display her agbada style outfit. She is standing in front of a dishevelled brown coloured building - Saturday 16 August 2025.

    In the Nigerian state of Oyo on Saturday there are more Yoruba celebrations as a worshipper of the deity Sango shows off her clothing as she participates in the annual Sango festival. [Emmanuel Adegboye/Shutterstock/EPA]

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    Singer Asake on stage with dark sunglasses wearing a white T-shirt and platinum jewellery. His band is behind him - Saturday 16 August 2025.

    On the same day in Detroit, Nigerian musician Asake graces the stage at a concert in the US city. [Robert Okine/Getty Images]

    Ahlam performs on stage while wearing a white dress with jewels on it. Behind her is a band, including men in black suits playing a drum, tambourine and drums - Thursday 21 August 2025.

    Emirati singer, Ahlam, glitters on stage on Thursday during a performance at Tunisia's Carthage International Festival. [Fethi Belaid/AFP/Getty Images]

    Divers in wet suits watch as a crane pulls an artefact from the waters at Abu Qir bay in Alexandria - Thursday 21 August 2025.

    Divers in a bay in the Egyptian city of Alexandria watch as a crane pulls up a giant stone artefact on Thursday as part of drive to recover sunken antiquities. [Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images]

    Girl in a white T-shirt with dark brown hair staring out the window of a bus whilst smiling. Her mother, wearing a black and white outfit, holds her back slightly - Thursday 21 August 2025.

    In the same port city on the same day, a young girl smiles as enjoys the breeze through the window of a bus as temperatures soar amid a heatwave. [Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters]

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  • South African MP opens fire to fend off attack during attempted hijacking

    A prominent South African MP fired his gun to fend off a violent attack by a gang on him and two of his colleagues in Cape Town.

    Ian Cameron – along with two other members of parliament’s police committee, Lisa Schickerling and Nicholas Gotsell – were returning from a work trip when their vehicle was ambushed in the township of Philippi on Tuesday.

    The assailants smashed the car’s windows with bricks, injuring Cameron and Gotsell.

    Cameron, whose teeth were broken, retaliated by opening fire, injuring one of the attackers.

    Police said two teenagers, aged 16 and 18, had been arrested while they investigate a case of attempted murder and attempted hijacking.

    Crime is a major problem in South Africa and the country has one of the highest murder rates in the world.

    One of the suspects was apprehended while seeking medical treatment at a hospital on Tuesday, while the other was arrested on a farm early on Wednesday, police said, adding that a search was under way for a third suspect.

    Cameron, who chairs the police committee, told broadcaster Newzroom Afrika that they were returning from an unannounced visit to a police academy in Philippi when “the first brick came through [the window]” on the driver’s side and hit him in the face.

    Cameron said that while he was trying to fend off his attacker, he saw his colleagues also face a barrage of attacks from the other assailants.

    “I realised that if we don’t do something, then this can go really bad. So I did my best to act in self-defence with my firearm and then we sped off to the closest secure location.”

    In South Africa, it is legal to carry a firearm, so long as you have a licence.

    Cameron, who was seen with a cut lip in the interview, said some of his teeth had been broken, while Gotsell was briefly hospitalised after he was hit on the head.

    Gotsell, speaking after being discharged from hospital, praised Cameron, saying he “acted with such bravery”.

    All three MPs are members of the Democratic Alliance (DA), the second-biggest party in South Africa’s coalition government.

    The party said the attack showed how “out-of-control” crime is in South Africa.

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  • Charlize Theron’s Life in Photos

    Charlize Theron’s Life in Photos

    1997: Posing with Mom

    Theron, who grew up as an only child, is pictured here with her mother, Gerda, in their hometown. Theron’s father was killed by her mother in self-defense in 1991. “My father was so drunk that he shouldn’t have been able to walk when he came into the house with a gun,” Theron said in 2019 of what happened, via People. “My mom and I were in my bedroom leaning against the door because he was trying to push through the door.”

    “So both of us were leaning against the door from the inside to have him not be able to push through,” she said. “He took a step back and just shot through the door three times. None of the bullets ever hit us, which is just a miracle. But in self-defense, she ended the threat [to save us].” Theron added this was why no charges were brought against her mother.

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