S.Africa threatens clampdown on violent protests

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – South Africa’s government  yesterday threatened to crack down on violent protests which  erupted this week over jobs and living conditions, posing an  early challenge to President Jacob Zuma.

Police fired rubber bullets and teargas on Wednesday at  township rioters who were calling for the removal of local  officials of the ruling ANC party they accuse of corruption.  Scores of protesters have been arrested.

Handling the crisis will be an early test for Zuma, who took  office in May after pledging to do more to help the poor.  That  main plank of the ANC’s election manifesto has been constrained  by financial woes in Africa’s biggest economy.

“The law must take its course. We’ll deal ruthlessly with  that because we can’t allow that. We’re not going to allow  anyone attaining their goals by illegal means,” Cooperative  Governance Minister Sicelo Shiceka said on Talk Radio 702.

Police said calm had returned to Siyathemba township,  southeast of Johannesburg, after four days of rebellion.  Violence flared in various townships after a series of strikes.

The unrest, with scenes reminiscent of attacks against  foreigners last year that killed 62 people, have dented South  Africa’s hope of showing a positive image less than a year  before the country hosts the soccer World Cup.

In the Ramaphosa squatter settlement east of Johannesburg,  one of the main trouble spots during last year’s violence,  thousands of residents staged a peaceful protest march.

Watched by heavily armed police, the protesters carried  placards. One said: “Poor service delivery is what we hate.”

Many South Africans say local governments have failed to  provide jobs, housing, sanitation and medical services, and have  instead promoted a culture of nepotism.

“I want to live like Zuma in a house with electricity. I’m  tired of living in a shack, I want a flush toilet,” said Nicolas  Mabitsela, who lives in the Ramaphosa settlement.

Tough police measures could further alienate residents of  grim townships, glaring reminders of decades of apartheid when  angry youths also burned tyres and hurled stones at police.