Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
3 MIN LESEZEIT

Gun Runners

ALET PRETORIUS

SOUTH AFRICA

ALET PRETORIUS/GALLO/GETTY

Pretoria, South Africa—When South Africans took to the streets, marching on February 24 against an inlux of foreign workers, the situation quickly turned violent. Protesters clashed with immigrants while police ired rubber bullets and stun grenades into the crowds. Crime and unemployment continue to plague the country, and many there have used Somalis and Nigerians as scapegoats. “It is wrong to brandish all non-nationals as drug dealers or human traickers,” President Jacob Zuma said, trying to calm the situation. “Let us isolate those who commit such crimes… without stereotyping and causing harm to innocent people.”

Schalten Sie diesen Artikel und vieles mehr frei mit
Sie können genießen:
Genießen Sie diese Ausgabe in voller Länge
Sofortiger Zugang zu mehr als 600 Titeln
Tausende von früheren Ausgaben
Kein Vertrag und keine Verpflichtung
Versuch für €1.09
JETZT ABONNIEREN
30 Tage Zugang, dann einfach €11,99 / Monat. Jederzeit kündbar. Nur für neue Abonnenten.


Mehr erfahren
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

Dieser Artikel stammt aus...


View Issues
Newsweek International
10th March 2017
ANSICHT IM LAGER

Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


BIG SHOTS
Stone Cold
Philadelphia—It was a shocking display of mass desecration. In late
Babylon by Bus
Mosul, Iraq—These are the lucky ones— Iraqis fortunate enough to
Pipeline of Tears
Cannon Ball, North Dakota—For months they came—Native Americans, environmentalists, veterans—pitching
PAGE ONE
PROBING THE RUSSIAN BEAR
How will Congress investigate Moscow’s attempts to influence the 2016 election?
Pennies From Haven
IF BREXIT NEGOTIATIONS GO BADLY, THE U.K. HAS A FALLBACK—BECOMING THE NEXT SWITZERLAND
INVISIBLE BRUTES
Many Indians say their country is dealing with a rape crisis. So why is there still no national registry for sex offenders?
STARSHIP STUPORS
Egypt’s economy is in crisis. So why is the government spending millions on a fancy new space agency?
FEATURES
OUR OWN WORST ENEMY
FROM HIS CLUMSY COMMENTS TO THE TRAVEL BAN, DONALD TRUMP IS GIVING JIHADIS WHAT THEY WANT
THE JESUS GULAG
A Christian school for troubled youth was supposed to treat teens for drug addiction and mental health problems. But its extreme, fundamentalist program trapped them in a brutal world of forced nudity and sadistic beatings
NEW WORLD
THE SMALLER BANG THEORY
Additive manufacturing may result in safer, cheaper rocket fuel
GOLDMAN SACKED
AI is about to kill most of Wall Street’s fat cats. Try not to cheer
READING THE PAIN
Clinicians are terrible at predicting suicides, but AI can nail it
TICK TALK
SCIENTISTS TICKLE THE DEVILISH QUESTION OF WHY TICKS DON’T GET LYME DISEASE
THE SCIENCE PRINCESS
Pushing gender equality instead of her crown
WEEKEND
Midnight, Mississippi Go on the road with one of America’s acutest writers
IN JUNE 1970, Joan Didion went on the road. Aged
Monsters, Inc. John Malkovich is about to play a dictator. Time to talk bad guys
JOHN MALKOVICH is very good at being bad. His Broadway
Home Truth Natalie Melton puts the heart into artisan at the New Craftsmen
The New Craftsmen started life in 2012 in a London
Frantzén’s Kitchen, Hong Kong
In November, two-Michelin-starred Swedish chef Björn Frantzén launched his first
Light Fantastic
WE STILL LIVE in the shadow of the Age of
Levison Wood, explorer, steps out with Eric Newby
“Good travel writing should read like iction—not just a day-to-day
On the Streets A lost city is refound by Jacqueline Woodson
WHEN American author Jacqueline Woodson was growing up in Bushwick—
Alone On the Range Kristen Stewart fills Montana’s empty spaces in Certain Women
KELLY REICHARDT’S sixth feature, Certain Women, is set in Montana,
Group think
THIS SPRING visitors to the Whitney Museum of American Art
‘Marilina in a Tiled Room’ Cooper & Gorfer
“PHOTOGRAPHY IS not like painting. There is a creative fraction