MOB MENACE: African migrants flee into the mountains as xenophobic violence surges across Western Cape
Foreign nationals in the Western Cape town of Kleinmond describe being forced to hide from armed mobs. One said he was warned by his landlord to evacuate ‘because if they find us, they’re going to kill us’.
Foreign nationals in the Western Cape town of Kleinmond describe being forced to hide from armed mobs. One said he was warned by his landlord to evacuate ‘because if they find us, they’re going to kill us’.
Four days ago, Mozambican immigrant Lado Amido answered a knock at his door in the South African town of Kleinmond. Outside, an angry crowd told him foreigners such as him had to leave. They went door to door, delivering the same message.
Amido fled and spent two nights in the mountains. Now he is sheltering in a local town hall, like other immigrants from Malawi and Mozambique across the Western Cape, forced to hide from anti-immigrant mobs in several coastal towns.
South Africa has seen a wave of anti-immigrant protests, which have sometimes turned violent, in recent weeks. Mozambique said five of its citizens were killed in xenophobic attacks in Mossel Bay over the weekend.
“On the 31st, people came to my house, knocked on the door, and then took all my belongings,” said the 49-year-old, who had been in South Africa since February looking for work.
In the Kleinmond town hall, he is with about 100 other immigrants, some of whom are hoping to join voluntary repatriation programmes set up by their governments.
Immigrants in South Africa are often blamed for economic woes such as high unemployment and crime.
Despite the absence of any evidence for this claim, politicians from nearly all parties have tended to lend credence to the perception in an effort to secure populist votes before elections, such as the local polls due on 4 November 2026.
“As we work to build a safer... and more prosperous society, we need to address the challenge of migration,” President Cyril Ramaphosa told Parliament on Tuesday, while also condemning recent xenophobic violence.
Grant Cohen, a ward councillor for Kleinmond, said that immigration authorities had visited the town in recent weeks to check restaurants and other businesses for undocumented workers.
But many of the foreign nationals sheltering at the town hall are in the country legally, he told Reuters.
“We’ve got kids here at the moment who should be in school, who have been in school in Kleinmond... [but] now want to flee the country out of fear and intimidation,” said Cohen.
“I don’t believe that residents should take things into their own hands.”
Michael Markson, a 31-year-old from Malawi, said he spent Saturday night sleeping in the mountains after fleeing the informal settlement where he had lived for about a year.
“My landlord came telling me that I should evacuate because if they f
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