South Africa’s bishops condemned an attack on a mosque near Durban in which a man was killed and another two injured.
Mechanic Abbas Mohamedelo Essop died after his throat was cut in the attack on the mosque in Verulam, about 20 miles north of Durban. Three men armed with guns and knives set the mosque alight.
“We strongly condemn this bloody and futile attack and call upon law enforcement agencies to work diligently to bring the perpetrators to justice,” Archbishop Stephen Brislin of Cape Town, president of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference, said in a statement last week.
“Religious tolerance has long been a characteristic of South African society, and those who wish to wreak havoc, and set one faith community against another, must never be allowed to succeed,” he said.
Christians and Muslims “live peacefully side by side” in the Archdiocese of Durban, said Fr Brett Williams, archdiocesan chancellor and pastor of St Joseph’s Church.
Emmanuel Cathedral and Jumma Masjid mosque are neighbours in central Durban, and their members work together, serving the city’s poor in the Denis Hurley Centre, which is positioned between them, Fr Williams said. The centre is named after the city’s former Catholic archbishop.
“We are deeply saddened by this attack,” Fr Williams said, noting that “there is a strong bond” among people of different faiths in Durban.
“On assessing the crime scene, it was found there was an element of extremism to it,” said Capt. Simphiwe Mhlongo, crime investigation spokesman.
South Africa has not been a target for Islamist militant attacks such as those in other African countries, including Kenya.