JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Jimmy Malish huddles under a blanket, looks at the darkening sky and prays that it doesn’t rain again on him and the hundreds of other African migrants camped in the courtyard of a Johannesburg police station.

African immigrants, displaced by anti-foreigner violence in Johannesburg, warm their hands around a small fire outside the Jeppe police station in the city, May 27, 2008. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings

“We are living like dogs,” the 26-year-old Sudanese refugee said on Tuesday at the Jeppe police station, more than a week after a mob, armed with knives and sticks, drove him and his foreign-born neighbours from their homes in a nearby township.

“Please tell somebody to help us.”

His plea is echoed by Zimbabweans, Mozambicans and others from around the continent targeted in a wave of attacks in South Africa that have killed dozens of foreign workers and displaced tens of thousands.

Some estimates put the number of refugees at 80,000-100,000.

Although President Thabo Mbeki and other senior officials have condemned the violence, on the ground there are few signs the government has stepped in with significant aid for victims.

The lion’s share of blankets, tents, clothes and food distributed in refugee shelters and camps have come from relief agencies, religious groups and individual citizens.

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“This is a refugee crisis and it is unattended,” said Muriel Cornelius of Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders). The French humanitarian group is providing health care to displaced migrants throughout the country.

While praising the efforts of non-governmental agencies and individuals, she said the lack of an orchestrated government response threatened to worsen the plight of those displaced, some of whom sleep outside in near freezing temperatures.

DISEASE

Doctors and nurses report an array of respiratory infections, diarrhoea and other opportunistic diseases in overcrowded shelters and camps, posing a risk of wider outbreaks.

The Red Cross also has complained about the lack of national coordination by government.

The crisis has prompted thousands to return home.

At least 50,000 Mozambicans and Zimbabweans have left South Africa since the attacks, which have now subsided, began on May 11. Smaller numbers have gone back to Zambia and Malawi.

Zimbabweans are the largest immigrant group in South Africa, accounting for an estimated 60 percent of the 5 million migrants here. South Africa’s population is about 50 million.

The bloodshed and subsequent exodus is embarrassing to a country that has prided itself on welcoming immigrants and asylum seekers, and officials are taking steps to reintegrate migrants back into the community.

While some have accepted the offer, others say they are too scared to do so.

“We will be killed by our neighbours, ” Ndubula Joelle, a pregnant mother of two from the Democratic Republic of Congo, said at the Jeppe police station. “They will cut my baby out. They told me.”