Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Tshwane riots, 2016

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Tshwane

Date
  
20 June 2016

Causes
  
Unilateral appoint by the ANC of Thoko Didiza as their candidate for mayor of Tshwane in the 2016 municipal elections.

Result
  
5 dead, 54 people arrested

Methods
  
Looting, Civil disobedience, Demonstration

Tshwane riots


The Tshwane riots were large scale violent riot that occurred in the South African city of Pretoria and the surrounding City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality on the 20th June 2016 leading to the deaths of at least 5 people.

Contents

govt concerned about tshwane riots defence minster


Riots

The protests were sparked by dissatisfaction with the appointment of Thoko Didiza as the incumbent African National Congress's (ANC) mayoral candidate in the upcoming South African municipal elections of 2016. By the 22 June forty people had been arrested for participating in the riots. By the time the riots ended in Tshwane on the 23 June a total of 54 people had been arrested. Rioters looted businesses and attacked members of the public including immigrants and small traders. Nineteen busses worth R28-million had been torched in the riots within the first two days of rioting with the worst rioting occurring in the areas of Mamelodi‚ Atteridgeville‚ Mabopane‚ Soshanguve and Hammanskraal.

Minister of State Security David Mahlobo stated that the protests were started by ANC members “who were not satisfied with the processes” that resulted in Didiza being appointed the party's candidate for mayor of Tshwane. The ANC Youth League went on to accuse supporters of ANC member and incumbent Tshwane mayor, Kgosientso Ramokgopa, as the people responsible for initiating the riots.

Riots spread to Cape Town by the 1st July 2016 with protesters stoning vehicles and torching buses along the N2 highway outside the neighbourhood of Nyanga. The protests in Cape Town were sparked by the announcement that Xolani Sotashe was to be the African National Congress choice as candidate for the mayor of Cape Town.

References

Tshwane riots, 2016 Wikipedia