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Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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Operation Dudula Continues- Blood Shed Will Soon Start in SOUTH AFRICA!!!! / Wow Pictures! New Militant 'Xenophobic' Movement In SA Called 'Operation Dudula' / Since We All Admit We Hate White People (2) (3) (4)

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Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by naptu2: 5:26am On Sep 18, 2023

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rogZ8BYg-kM?si=Hvd7kj8BuqYnmngr

Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula vigilantes: 'Why we hate foreigners'



By Ayanda Charlie in Johannesburg & Tamasin Ford in London
BBC Africa Eye
4 hours ago


South African vigilante group Operation Dudula has become notorious for raiding businesses belonging to foreign nationals and forcing shops to close. BBC Africa Eye has gained rare access to members of the country's most-prominent anti-migrant street movement.

In a school kitchen in Kwa Thema, a township east of Johannesburg, Dimakatso Makoena is busy making sandwiches. The 57-year-old single parent of three has been a cook there for more than 10 years.

"To tell you the truth, I hate foreigners. How I wish they could just pack and go and leave our country," she says, fighting back tears.

It is hard to understand the strength of this hate until Ms Makoena pulls out her phone to show a picture of her son. Emaciated with a glazed look in his eyes, angry burn scars spread over his body, up his arms and across his face.

"He started smoking drugs when he was 14 years old," she says, explaining how her son often goes out to steal things to feed his habit. One day he had tried to take some power cables to sell when he got electrocuted and burned.


Dimakatso Makoena blames foreigners for selling drugs to her son and destroying his life

Her son uses crystal meth and nyaope, a highly addictive street drug that has devastated communities across South Africa. It is not until she blames foreigners for selling the drugs that her reasoning and support for Operation Dudula becomes clear.

"Dudula, that's the only thing that keeps me going," she tells the BBC.

Operation Dudula was set-up in Soweto two years ago, the first group to formalise what had been sporadic waves of xenophobia-fuelled vigilante attacks in South Africa that date back to shortly after white-minority rule ended in 1994. It calls itself a civic movement, running on an anti-migrant platform, with the word "dudula" meaning "to force out" in Zulu.

Soweto was at the forefront of anti-apartheid resistance and home to Nelson Mandela, South Africa's first democratically elected president. Now, the township has become the home of the country's most-prominent anti-migrant group.

With one in three South Africans out of work in one of the most unequal societies in the world, foreigners in general have become an easy target.

But the number of migrants living in South Africa has been grossly exaggerated. According to a 2022 report by the Institute for Security Studies (ISS), an independent research organisation based in the capital, Pretoria, there are about 3.95 million migrants in South Africa, making up 6.5% of the population, a figure in line with international norms. This number includes all immigrants, irrespective of legal status or where they come from.

The xenophobic rhetoric used by some public officials, politicians and anti-migrant groups has helped fuel the myth that the country is overrun with migrants. The South African Social Attitudes Survey for 2021 found that almost half of the population of 60 million people believed there were between 17 and 40 million immigrants in the country.

Current polling suggests support for the governing African National Congress (ANC), the party once led by Mr Mandela, could fall below 50% for the first time.

Operation Dudula has ambitions to fill that vacuum and has now transformed itself from a local anti-migrant group into a national political party, stating its aims to contest next year's general election.

[img]http://c.files.bbci.co.uk/assets/a3732ba1-d88d-4fc6-88ff-4dc5860aca80[/img]
We must be realistic here that most of the problems that we have are caused by the influx of foreign nationals. Our country is a mess"
Zandile Dabula
Operation Dudula president


Zandile Dabula, who was voted in as president of Operation Dudula in June 2023, is calm, charismatic and emphatic about the group's message: "foreigners" are the root cause of South Africa's economic hardship.

When it is put to her that this campaign is based solely on hate, she tells the BBC: "We must be realistic here that most of the problems that we have are caused by the influx of foreign nationals.

"Our country is a mess. Foreign nationals are working on a 20-year plan of taking over South Africa."

When challenged on the veracity of this 20-year plan, she admits it was a rumour but says she believes it is true.

"You see drugs everywhere and most of the drug addicts are South African rather than foreign nationals. So, what's happening? Are they feeding our own brothers and sisters so that it can be easy for them to take over?" she says.

Yet the anger meted out to migrants can be on those who are in the country legally and working in legal occupations. A Nigerian market trader, who was the target of a raid by Operation Dudula members in Johannesburg earlier in the year, tells the BBC that the two women who tasered him and destroyed his clothes by throwing them in the gutter did not stop to ask questions.

As they shot he says they swore at him, saying: "You must go to Nigeria… We are Dudula, we are South African."

With no stock, he is now sleeping on the streets: "I vote in this country. I am a citizen here. I've never seen a country treating people like this. If I'm doing something illegal, fine. Deport me. But I'm not doing anything illegal. Now you make my life miserable, I can't pay my rent. I want to go, it's too much."

Operation Dudula maintains it is concern over the huge influx of drugs into South Africa's most deprived communities that is their most pressing complaint, but there is no data to back up the claim that people who sell drugs are not South African citizens.

Comparative statistics are not available for drug crimes, though the ISS report quotes the justice minister as saying that immigrants made up 8.5% of all convicted cases in 2019 and 7.1% in 2020. The ISS adds that 2.3% of inmates incarcerated each year are undocumented foreigners.

In Diepkloof, in eastern Soweto, the BBC joins a so-called Dudula taskforce. Men in trucks are going to confront a Mozambican shopkeeper who a South African landlady alleges has not paid his rent.

It is supposed to be a negotiation but quickly descends into a confrontation where one of the men, Mandla Lenkosi, threatens to beat him up. When the BBC asks them about their thuggish behaviour, they maintain they are enforcing the law.

Mr Lenkosi, also from Soweto and out of work, takes part in raids on migrant homes and workplaces, people who are suspected of anything from drug dealing to remaining in the country past their visa date.

[img]http://c.files.bbci.co.uk/assets/d4d62185-14a6-4525-88fb-254d9ea6bca9[/img]
We grew up in apartheid times, where things were much better than what it is now"
Mandla Lenkosi
Operation Dudula member


"We grew up in apartheid times, where things were much better than what it is now," he says, pointing to the drug problems. "The law was the law [then]."

His fellow Dudula supporter, Cedric Stone, agrees: "South Africa needs to go back to the old South Africa that we know.

"Our fathers started the tuck shops but today all those tuck shops are all foreigners, especially, Bangladeshis, Somali and Ethiopians. Why?"

President Cyril Ramaphosa has spoken out against anti-migrant protests, and condemned vigilante groups for harassing and attacking migrants. He has likened their behaviour to strategies adopted by the apartheid regime to oppress black communities.

In 2019 he launched the National Action Plan to combat racism and xenophobia, yet campaigners want the government do more.

Annie Michaels, an activist from the Johannesburg Migrants Advisory Panel, says South Africans are blaming the wrong people for their ills and should in fact admire migrants for their survival skills.

"Stop sitting and complaining and dying in that corner and waiting for the government that is failing you on a daily basis," she tells the BBC.

"The migrants… are the poorest of the poor. They would rather go to them and rattle them, instead of rattling the cages of the guys living in the glass houses."

For her part, Ms Dabula says critics of Operation Dudula who maintain it is a collective of violent vigilantes are wrong.

"We don't promote violence and we don't want people to feel harassed," but adds: "We cannot be overtaken by foreign nationals and do nothing about it."

Hundreds of supporters travelled to attend its first national conference in Johannesburg in May, where members voted to register the group as a political party.


Operation Dudula gives Dimakatso Makoena a sense of purpose and hope about the future

Waving South African flags, dancing and singing their way through the streets to the City Hall, it feels like a celebration.

However, the songs they are singing carry a threatening message: "Burn the foreigner. We will go to the garage, buy some petrol and burn the foreigner."

The military clothing harks back to South Africa's liberation struggle. It all communicates a readiness for battle.

Ms Makoena is also there, smiling and dressed in her party T-shirt. "Operation Dudula is going to make history today," she says.

On stage, Isaac Lesole, Operation Dudula's technical adviser, has a question for the cheering supporters: "Do we make peace with illegal foreigners?"

"No," the audience shout back in unison.

According to South African law, registering a party does not mean it will automatically qualify to contest an election - it has hoops to go through.

Operation Dudula does not have a manifesto or any policy other than its stance on foreigners, though Ms Dabula maintains it has a presence in every province except Northern Cape.

Supporters of the new party who spoke to the BBC appear to genuinely want things to be fixed in their communities. They reflect a change of mood in South Africa's political landscape with people fed up with the status quo.

However, a toxic mix of poverty, drugs and fear has resulted in a blame game where migrants have become the scapegoats.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-66808346?

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Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by naptu2: 5:26am On Sep 18, 2023
Idah Peterside is a former Nigerian goalkeeper. He played for clubs in Nigeria and South Africa in the 1990s and 2000s. He retired and became a pastor and a pundit for SuperSport.

In May last year I wrote about how Operation Dudula vigilantes invaded his church. See previous thread here:

South African Police And Vigilante Invade Peterside Idah's Church
https://www.nairaland.com/7123031/south-african-police-vigilante-invade

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Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by naptu2: 5:26am On Sep 18, 2023
Some South Africans believe that immigrants bring drugs, prostitution and armed robbery to their country. They believe that the South African Police Services (SAPS) is corrupt and has been bribed by Nigerians. Therefore they believe that they should take the laws into their hands and invade Nigerian owned businesses and chase the Nigerians and Zimbabweans out of their country.

Many people have formed vigilante groups and have gained fame and power from such groups. Their victims accuse the vigilantes of corruption, seizing their goods, violence and other atrocities. Some accuse the vigilantes of blackmailing them.

Xolani Khumalo is a South African tech entrepreneur. He created a web series called Sizokuhtola. Basically, viewers can report Nigerian and Zimbabweans that they suspect are drug dealers and Xolani and his vigilantes will invade their premises and take action.

In this video, Xolani and his vigilantes invade the premises of a Nigerian called Pedro.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0EiR8Z7pmjU?si=yybpofsRzi6UBPv7

However, Pedro made a video in which he claimed that Xolani planted drugs in his premises and assaulted him.

CrimeInSA @sa_crime

Video 1 of 8

Nigerian National M Pedro alleged that he was assaulted by the crew of Sizokthola, a South Africa TV show that fights drugs on @MojaLoveTv. Pedro alleged that the crew of Sizokthola targets Nigerians and that they planted drugs at his place of residence.

Video 2 of 8
The show has brought a lot of drug dealers to book but unfortunately corruption is still a problem in the police. Pedro was featured on Season 2, Episode 3 of Sizokthola, on @DStv Channel 157. Pedro has previously been arrested for possession of drugs by the police.

You can watch the videos through this link: https://twitter.com/sa_crime/status/1661225971633012736?lang=en

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Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by wittywriter: 5:35am On Sep 18, 2023
Waiting
New Week
New online dealings and gigs activated.
South Africans always playing the blame game.


Wittyness

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by nams77: 6:08am On Sep 18, 2023
Really
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by MrsTwrite(f): 6:10am On Sep 18, 2023
I'm surprised tho.
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by naptu2: 6:11am On Sep 18, 2023
The Nigerian High Commission in South Africa issued a security advisory to Nigerians in the country.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMmvr80ZZpg?si=jQqUzZSwl6jhSnIn
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by naptu2: 6:11am On Sep 18, 2023
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by naptu2: 6:12am On Sep 18, 2023
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by naptu2: 6:17am On Sep 18, 2023
A former Operation Dudula vigilante explains why he left the group.

1) If you say all foreigners must go, that means that all embassies in South Africa must shut down and all our ambassadors abroad must come back home.

2) The people that suffer from these things are always Africans. You don't see the Chinese being affected. It is always Africans, Mozambicans, etc.

3) It is the people in the townships that are affected. If we say all foreigners must go, that means we want battles in our townships.

4) People have never heard me say all foreigners must go. I have always said that it is the undocumented foreigners and criminals that should go. I don't agree that all foreigners should go.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXUF-yWwH6c?si=RPrdDFU3T21b-XWX

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Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Raskimonojendor: 6:18am On Sep 18, 2023
I don't blame them.


Dimakatso Makoena blames foreigners for selling drugs to her son and destroying his life.

Her son uses crystal meth and nyaope, a highly addictive street drug that has devastated communities across South Africa. It is not until she blames foreigners for selling the drugs that her reasoning and support for Operation Dudula becomes clear.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by TongueTwista(m): 6:48am On Sep 18, 2023
If you're not wanted in another man's land, pack up and leave!

The idea of sitting tight in the midst of animals who believe your presence is the fertile ground for their existential challenges, is a complete no-brainer.

This is the same South Africa we stood by, gave our voices, hearts, resources and military might to help liberate from decades of slavery and oppression. The same retards are returning that era of brotherliness to our citizens by killing, maiming and plundering their livelihoods.

They want all foreigners to leave their country but the stupid monkeys are only attacking their fellow black men living and doing businesses in the townships. Why are they not bold enough to dish the same treatments to the whites living in glass houses in their cities?

To think their own Nationals are here in Nigeria raking up hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenues and we never even as much as sneer at them. All of this nonsense is a direct offshoot of the actions and inactions of our miserable politicians. Because of their age-long failures in governance, Nigerians are having to find lives outside their homelands and being subjected to all manner of nonsensical behaviour in the process.

The average Nigerian man goes through a life of hell. We're taken for granted by everyone, including our politicians. Now ordinary South Africans who are still fettered to the shackles of their white supremacists have joined the fray.

If there is indeed a god somewhere watching the malady that is the life of a Nigerian, he is a weakling and a failure!

23 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by naptu2: 6:53am On Sep 18, 2023
Reactions

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Dpen11(f): 6:58am On Sep 18, 2023
Speechless
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by jmoore(m): 7:09am On Sep 18, 2023
This people mumu eh. They won't attack the Chinese but they will attack other black africans.

16 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Nightwolf1: 7:18am On Sep 18, 2023
I blame the useless Nigerian leadership that is responsible for making lives of Nigerians miserable thereby creating an avenue for these animals to Insult us.

22 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Nobody: 7:21am On Sep 18, 2023
jmoore:
This people mumu eh. They won't attack the Chinese but they will attack other black africans.
There you go again children of hate. They should attack the peaceful kind Chinese and give you wretched hateful drug traffickers a pass because you’re African? Why not give the Fulani herdsmen a pass in your region then. Or the rules should only apply in others land?

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Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by 22o62021: 7:24am On Sep 18, 2023
I won't even go to South Africa

3 Likes

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by jmoore(m): 7:27am On Sep 18, 2023
Naijaboy18:

There you go again children of hate. They should attack the peaceful kind Chinese and give you wretched hateful drug traffickers a pass because you’re African? Why not give the Fulani herdsmen a pass in your region then. Or the rules should only apply in others land?
Peterside that was attacked is doing drugs too?

I always know those who support drug trafficking Tinubu do not have sense.

Fulani herdsmen can buy land in any region and no one will harass them. It is only a FOOL that sees nothing wrong in Fulani herdsmen invading a farm, destroying crops.

45 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by jeff1993: 7:35am On Sep 18, 2023
South Africans and their Generational Ugliness ..... Their black men are one of the ugliest on Eatth always looking retarded.

2 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by inoki247: 7:35am On Sep 18, 2023
Na Blackman tormenting each other....
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Boondocxs(f): 7:36am On Sep 18, 2023
Dlck heads
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Chibuzoc(m): 7:36am On Sep 18, 2023
cool
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Woodshot: 7:36am On Sep 18, 2023
grin grin grin
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by PlayerMeji: 7:36am On Sep 18, 2023
Igbo businesses will be among those businesses targeted!

I think Tinubu has a hand in this too!

According to a Disobidient cheesy grin

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by propsad3: 7:39am On Sep 18, 2023
K
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Nobody: 7:43am On Sep 18, 2023
jmoore:

Peterside that was attacked is doing drugs too?

I always know those who support drug trafficking Tinubu do not have sense.

Fulani herdsmen can buy land in any region and no one will harass them. It is only a FOOL that sees nothing wrong in Fulani herdsmen invading a farm, destroying crops.
But SANs don’t see anything wrong with foreign drug traffickers right?

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by jubrilELsudan: 7:48am On Sep 18, 2023
THESE CLOWNS ARE A BUNCH OF INGULUBES

IF DEM BORN DEM WELL MAKE DEM ENTER HILLBROW TO DO THIS NONESENSE

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by LaSenior: 7:50am On Sep 18, 2023
cheesy
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by rajiedreez: 7:51am On Sep 18, 2023
sad
Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by tishbite42: 7:53am On Sep 18, 2023
Cursed people
Economic slaves in their own lands
Hating on fellow blacks

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Inside South Africa's Operation Dudula Vigilantes: 'Why We Hate Foreigners' by Kay25(m): 7:55am On Sep 18, 2023
Afi dudu LA naa..

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