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'We fear for our lives' - deadline for migrants to leave South Africa looms 2 hours ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Nomsa Maseko , BBC Africa, Durban and Marco Oriunto Thuthuka Zondi / BBC Esnat Joseph said a gang of men came to her home in Durban to threaten the family - forcing her to flee with her triplets South Africa has become a hostile place for undocumented migrants, as a deadline set by protesters for them to leave the country approaches. "I am very scared and traumatised," Esnat Joseph, a 36-year-old Malawian woman, told the BBC as she tried to comfort her crying one-year-old triplets. She fled her home in an informal settlement in the port city of Durban, in KwaZulu-Natal province, seeking refuge in an open field where up to 7,000 foreigners - mainly Malawians - began gathering with their belongings two weeks ago. "The people came to my house and told me: 'You must leave. We don't want you people to stay here any longer, so you have to go to your country.' There were 10 and they were carrying weapons," she said, describing how the group of South African men were holding machetes and whips. "They cut my husband on his head and his neck. They were holding his neck like they wanted to kill him. Because of God he still survived, but he's in the hospital." Many others at the field, where aid groups have been giving out blankets and food, report such door-to-door intimidation. It follows a series of mainly peaceful protests this year led by the anti-migrant group March and March, opposition party ActionSA and others which have set 30 June as the deadline for undocumented migrants to leave. Sticks in hand, the marchers have been chanting "Mabahambe" - a Zulu phrase meaning "They must go". As the countdown continues, President Cyril Ramaphosa warned South Africans on Tuesday that the "scapegoating of vulnerable people" was not the solution to country's complex economic challenges. The protests so far have been mainly peaceful, but their message is unequivocal Joseph came to South Africa three years ago and was working as a domestic servant before having her children. Her legal status is not clear - she says she lost her passport and other paperwork in a robbery. She aims to go back to Malawi on one of the buses the Malawian consulate has been arranging with the help of denotations for its desperate citizens to leave Durban. Ghana, Mozambique, Nigeria and Zimbabwe have also been organising repatriations by air or bus over the last few weeks - with about 3,500 foreigners volunteering to leave so far. The South African authorities said the more than 500 Nigerians recently repatriated had been in the country illegally. Arriving in Lagos last week after nearly nine years in South Africa, Benjamin, a returnee who only gave his first name, told the BBC: "South Africans don't like foreigners, especially Nigerians. South Africa is not a place to be - it's a place you can lose your life at any time." Protest organisers deny their actions are x
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