Manhunt after 17 people killed in South Africa mass shooting

· BBC News
Detectives are surveying the crime scenesImage source, Reuters

Frances Mao
BBC News
Nomsa Maseko
BBC News
Reporting from
Johannesburg

Seventeen people have been killed in a mass shooting in a remote South African town with a manhunt under way to find the perpetrators, police say.

Two homesteads on the same street in the town of Lusikisiki, in the Eastern Cape, were targeted, police said, with 12 women and one man killed in one location, and three women and one man at a second location.

An 18th victim is in a critical condition in hospital, the South Africa Police Service said.

The police minister, Senzo Mchunu, is expected to visit the area where the attack occurred.

Officials said the victims were relatives and neighbours in Nyathi village, Ngobozana in Lusikisiki.

South African media reported the victims had been gathered at the houses to prepare to attend a traditional mourning ceremony for a mother and daughter who were murdered a year ago.

They had been packing goods and presents, including furniture, for the event when the attack occurred on Friday night, according to the media reports.

"We heard gunshots and doors that were kicked," Nomnikelo Ndlovu, one of the residents who was able to hide during the attack, told state broadcaster SABC.

"We tried to hide and three people were shot. We are still traumatised."

In a statement, the police minister said that there had been a total of 19 people sleeping in two homes in the same yard at one of the shooting locations.

Mchunu added that there had been six survivors at that homestead - four women, a man, and a two-month-old child. A police spokesperson said earlier that the child was uninjured, but had been taken to hospital as a precaution.

There were no survivors at the other homestead.

Mchunu said a team of detectives and forensic experts, including crime scene managers from Pretoria, had been deployed "to piece all [the] evidence together in a bid to apprehend these brutal criminals".

Officials have yet to determine the motive behind the attack or make any arrests.

Regional cabinet member for community safety, Xolile Nqatha, told SABC that he hoped the critically injured man would make a "speedy" recovery, as "his recovery can help us shed more light" on the shooting.

He also suggested that the assailants may have been known to the victims.

South Africa has one of the highest murder rates in the world, according to the latest figures from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

There were more than 27,000 murders in 2022 - amounting to 45 people per 100,000, out of a population of almost 60 million. By comparison, the US rate is six per 100,000.

Additional reporting by Aleks Phillips

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