quinta-feira, 2 de julho de 2026
Tens of thousands of South Africans took to the streets in nationwide anti-immigrant protests on June 30, 2026, to enforce an unofficial, citizen-led deadline demanding that all undocumented foreign nationals leave the country.
Thousands
take to streets in South Africa anti-immigrant protests
Tens of
thousands of South Africans took to the streets in nationwide anti-immigrant
protests on June 30, 2026, to enforce an unofficial, citizen-led deadline demanding that all
undocumented foreign nationals leave the country. Organized primarily by civic
pressure groups such as the "March and March" movement and Operation
Dudula, the demonstrations brought major economic hubs—including Johannesburg,
Durban, Pretoria, and Cape Town—to a standstill.
Key
Details of the Unrest
- The "Deadline": Activist groups arbitrarily set
June 30, 2026, as the final date for illegal immigrants to self-deport,
claiming they fuel crime, drive down wages, and overstretch public
resources.
- Casualties & Violence: While authorities reported that
the 120 nationwide marches were mostly peaceful, significant pockets of
violence emerged. At least four people have been killed, shops owned by
foreign nationals were looted, and cars were set on fire.
- Mass Arrests: South African police forces
arrested more than 900 people for public violence, looting,
business robbery, and immigration violations.
- Threat of Ongoing Action: Jacinta Ngobese-Zuma, leader of
the March and March movement, declared that demonstrations will continue every
Thursday for the next six months to pressure the state into conducting
building-by-building deportations.
Government
and Military Response
In
anticipation of the escalating tensions, South African Police Minister Firoz
Cachalia oversaw a massive security deployment, utilizing helicopters, drones,
and tactical vehicles. The South African National Defence Force (SANDF)
military troops were put on standby and deployed to high-risk zones, such as
Johannesburg’s inner-city Hillbrow neighborhood, to restore order.
President Cyril Ramaphosa strongly condemned the vigilante
actions. The government stressed that immigration enforcement is strictly a
state responsibility and that citizens have no legal authority to stop
individuals, demand identification, or execute forced evictions.
Humanitarian
Crisis and Mass Exodus
The hostile
climate has sparked a severe humanitarian emergency. Fearing for their lives,
thousands of foreign nationals—predominantly from Zimbabwe, Malawi, Nigeria,
and Mozambique—have fled their homes or been illegally evicted by landlords
trying to protect property.
In an
unprecedented regional response, neighboring African governments have stepped
in to protect their citizens:
- Repatriations: An estimated 25,000 people
have already been repatriated.
- Emergency Transport: The governments of Malawi,
Zimbabwe, Uganda, and Nigeria have organized emergency buses and
evacuation flights to pull their nationals out of the country safely.
- Consulate Camps: Thousands of displaced migrants
are currently camping out outside foreign embassies and transit centers
seeking sanctuary.
Experts from
institutions like the African Centre for Migration & Society point out that
migrants are being used as scapegoats for South Africa's deep-rooted economic
issues, including a staggering unemployment rate that sits well above 30
percent. Politically, analysts expect illegal immigration to remain a
hyper-polarized, central issue leading into the local government elections
scheduled for November
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