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Tragic! South Africa’s Johannesburg mass shooting at bar claims 14 lives

JOHANNESBURG-(MaraviPost)-Fourteen people are reported to have died in a mass shooting at a bar in Soweto township near Johannesburg in South Africa .

According to the country’s media reports, the tragic incident happened on Sunday July 10, 2022.

The Gauteng Police Commissioner Elias Mawela said nine people were also being treated at a certain hospital within the township for gun wounds.

Mass shooting

“We were called in the early hours of the morning, around 12:30 a.m. (10:30 p.m. GMT),” said Mawela.

He added, “When we arrived on the scene, 12 people were confirmed dead.”

Mawela said 11 others were taken to hospital with wounds but two later died, raising the toll to 14.

He said the incident happened shortly after midnight when gunmen opened fire on revelers who were enjoying themselves at a club in the Nomzamo informal settlement in Orlando.

“A group of men armed with rifles and 9 mm pistols entered the tavern and started shooting randomly at the patrons who were sitting inside,” a police statement said.

“For now, we don’t have details on the motive of the attack but as investigations progress, we are hoping we will get more information,” Mawela told local reporters at the scene.

He said the attackers used high-caliber weapons and were apparently shooting randomly.

The incident comes two weeks after the tragic deaths of 22 young people at a nightclub in the city of East London in the Eastern Cape province.

Police say a hunt is on to find the perpetrators.

The attack comes on the heels of June 8, 2022, which marks a one-year anniversary of the outbreak of deadly rioting triggered by the jailing of former President Jacob Zuma for ignoring a corruption inquiry.

The violence spread through Zuma’s home province KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng, the two most populous provinces which together account for half of South Africa’s economic output, claiming more than 300 lives.

It escalated into the worst unrest since the end of apartheid, prompting President Cyril Ramaphosa to label it an attempted “insurrection”.

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