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Army Deployment Begins In South Africa To Stop Violence

Army deployment begins in South Africa to stop violence, the death toll in violent incidents rises to 117.

South Africa’s military has started deploying 25,000 military forces to prevent violence and riots in support of former President Jacob Zuma.

In 1994, the largest army was deployed since the time of the minority government of whites. The South African National Defense Force then called in 12,000 military forces.

Armed trucks, gunmen, and helicopters have been deployed to stop week-long violence in South Africa’s Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal provinces.

These military forces will be deployed in Gauteng and KwaZulu Natal areas including Johannesburg. However, violence has spread to seven other provinces as well.

But the police have been alerted. Military forces have also been deployed in Maponya Mall in Soweto. Military forces have also started patrolling in these provinces.

Meanwhile, violence and looting have decreased in South Africa, but the death toll has risen to 117, according to Reuters. Hundreds of shops have been destroyed due to the violence.

Army deployment begins in South Africa: Violence is visible in the port city of Durban. Robbers looted shops here and there was an atmosphere of racial tension.

However, shopkeepers and other residents in the main commercial city of Johannesburg cleaned up the rubble and are calculating the damage caused by the violence.

The security chief of Haiti’s President House was arrested, police investigation questions the security of the Palace

The crackdown continues after the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Mousse. The police have arrested the head of palace security after 19 suspects were arrested on charges of murder in the past.

According to the news published in the leading newspaper, a spokesman for the National Police has confirmed that the security chief of President House, Dimitri Gerrard, has been taken into custody.

Prosecutors in the murder investigation are trying to find out why the attackers did not find much resistance at the president’s residence when the attack took place.

Jovenel Mousse was shot dead on July 7 at his home, after officials informed him that the attack was carried out by a group of assassins, which included 26 Colombians and two Haitian Americans.

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