International Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane will meet ambassadors and diplomats from other African countries today to discuss the wave of xenophobic attacks in Kwazulu Natal, and more recently in Johannesburg.
Five people have died during violent confrontations in KZN since last Friday, and thousands of foreigners have been displaced.
Violence in the Johannesburg area appeared to be waning yesterday, but in Wattville, Benoni, a handful of public order policemen entered a hostel to check for any irregular activity.
Yesterday afternoon, a plant in Mozambique owned by Sasol stopped production as Mozambican employees refused to work in protest over the events in South Africa, and demanded that the South Africans there go back home.
President Jacob Zuma again condemned the attacks in an address in Parliament yesterday but the EFF laid the blame at his and the government's door.
DA Parliamentary leader Mmusi Maimane said foreign business owners were not the enemy.
He said the real enemy was corruption - and a culture where dialogue was the last resort.