Ramaphosa faults US embassy over terror alert in South Africa

South African President, Cyril Ramaphosa, has described as “unfortunate” the warning of a possible terror attack issued by the US embassy in Pretoria without recourse to the government.

The US embassy, on Wednesday, posted the alert on its website and identified the potential target as Sandton, a suburb in the country’s financial hub of Johannesburg.

Sandton, a collection of high-end shops and lofty office blocks and banks, is commonly referred to as the richest square mile on the African continent.

The alert said the attack could occur there on Saturday.

“It is quite unfortunate the US issued that type of warning without having any type of discussion with us,” Ramaphosa said during a press conference.

“Any form of alert will come from the government of the republic of South Africa and it is unfortunate that another government should issue such a threat as to send panic amongst our people,” said Ramaphosa.

He was answering a question during a joint press conference with the visiting Spanish Prime Minister, Pedro Sanchez.

Ramaphosa said Pretoria is “working round the clock to verify and to look very closely at this message that came from the United States.”

The embassy said the US government had “received information that terrorists may be planning to conduct an attack targeting large gatherings of people at an unspecified location in the greater Sandton area of Johannesburg”.

The alert was quickly shared on social media and on WhatsApp groups across Johannesburg.

Pretoria, on Wednesday, appeared to downplay the alert, calling it “part of the US government’s standard communication to its citizens.”

Asked about Ramaphosa’s criticism, a US State Department spokesperson did not respond directly but said the United States believed it was critical to issue alerts “in real time”.

“We take seriously our commitment to provide US citizens with clear, timely and reliable information about every country in the world so they can make informed travel decisions,” the spokesperson said.

Several alerts have been issued about possible imminent attacks in South Africa in recent years, but none have materialised.

A respected local news website, News24, cited unnamed sources Thursday suggesting that a gay parade slated for Saturday in Sandton and a comedy show by a leading South African comedian of Jewish descent could have been the potential targets.

Organisers of the Johannesburg Pride vowed to forge ahead with the parade, which is returning after a two-year break due to Covid-19 pandemic restrictions.

The event “has not been directly threatened, nor have we received any communication from outside parties other than what the media assumed via the US embassy’s website,” they said in a statement.

“Gay pride began as a defiant campaign, and we will not be subjected to any threats based on sexual orientation and gender identity. We believe that all lives matter,” they said.

“It is critical for us to occupy the space we intend to occupy on October 29. We must take to the streets and… assert our visibility,” they added.

The US embassy, on Sunday, also issued a security alert in Nigeria, urging US citizens in the country to limit their movements due to an “elevated risk of terror attacks in Nigeria, specifically in Abuja.”

But the government, in a swift reaction, dismissed the travel advisory, saying Nigeria’s security agencies are up to their duty of protecting the country.

After the United States and Britain issued a similar security alert in 2016, South Africa reacted angrily to what it described as “attempts to generate perceptions of government ineptitude, alarmist impressions and public hysteria on the basis of a questionable single source.”

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