With anti-migrant sentiment escalating in South Africa (SA), Malawian John Allen threw some clothes in a bag, said goodbye to his SA girlfriend and their one-year-old son, and left to catch a bus out of the country.
He has now been waiting in a makeshift camp in the city of Durban, KwaZulu-Natal Province for four days with thousands of other people hoping to depart before June 30, an unofficial deadline set by anti-immigrant groups for all undocumented foreigners to leave.
Although the government has not condoned the deadline and condemns the violence, it has been criticized by other African states and civil society groups for failing to stamp it out.
“The reason I would like to stay is I feel bad for my child. He’s too young. When I’m gone who’s going to support him?” said Allen, 30.
The child’s mother, who is South African, only earns about $30 (R500) a week as a cleaner, but Allen had been earning four times that doing contract work for a manufacturing company, although he was undocumented.
As anti-immigrant protests surged in recent weeks some of the foreigners in his neighbourhood were beaten up, he said, and now almost everyone has left.
“There’s two options, I can lose my life or I can leave,” he told Reuters, standing with other men amid piles of luggage, waiting for a bus.
–Reuters–