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South Africa
WorldAfrica

South Africa calls up army reserves to help end deadly riots

  • Worst violence in years breaks out after jailing of ex-president Jacob Zuma
  • Shopping malls and warehouses ransacked or set ablaze in several cities

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Troops patrol past looted shops in Soweto, South Africa. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse
South Africa mustered its army reserves on Thursday in a bid to quell looting that has stoked fears of shortages and dealt a crippling blow to its already battered economy.

“All reserve members are to report for duty at first light tomorrow morning 15 July 2021 at their respective units,” army chief Lieutenant General Lawrence Mbatha said in orders issued overnight as the unrest entered its sixth day.

Soldiers should “report ready with their necessary equipment,” the defence ministry said in a statement.

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On Wednesday, the government said it would call out around 25,000 troops to tackle the emergency – 10 times the number that it initially deployed.

As relative calm returned to Johannesburg, Police Minister Bheki Cele hailed the boost from the military, saying he was confident it would “turn around the volatile situation in parts of KwaZulu-Natal” province, the epicentre of the unrest.

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Stores and warehouses in the two provinces have been ransacked, devastating supply chains on which food, fuel and medicines depend in Africa’s most industrialised economy.

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