The Government of Ghana has demanded justice after Bashiru Isak, 40, a tailor, was shot dead during anti immigrant protests in Cape Town on June 30.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Isak was killed at Khayelitsha, a township within Cape Town, as demonstrations tied to a campaign against undocumented migrants turned violent. He had lived and worked in South Africa for about 20 years and is survived by three children, the eldest reportedly 10 years old.
In a statement issued Wednesday, the ministry called the killing “a senseless act of violence” and demanded the immediate arrest and prosecution of those responsible. It urged South African authorities to run a full and transparent investigation and to protect Ghanaians and other foreign nationals still in the country.
The protests that preceded Isak’s death were organized around a deadline set by a movement called March and March, which had campaigned for weeks in Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban and Cape Town demanding that undocumented migrants leave South Africa by June 30. Isak’s death follows a separate killing days earlier of a Nigerian businessman shot outside his shop in Witbank, and comes three weeks after a Ghanaian woman was assaulted at her shop in an unrelated incident.
Ghana’s government said its petition to the African Union Commission over xenophobic attacks on African nationals in South Africa remains active and is expected to feature at the commission’s next scheduled meeting.
More than 900 Ghanaians have already left South Africa through a voluntary repatriation programme, with further evacuation flights scheduled for the coming week. The High Commission is arranging to return Isak’s remains to Ghana and has advised citizens who remain in the country to avoid protest areas and stay in contact with the mission.
South African police have not announced any arrests, and authorities have not confirmed whether the shooting was directly linked to the protests.

