Africa · Southern
Key Facts
—Deportations. Over 53,000 foreign nationals were processed for deportation in roughly five weeks, mainly from Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique.
—Vigilante Deadline. Anti-migrant groups set a 30 June 2026 ultimatum for undocumented foreigners to leave the country or face violent repercussions.
—Displacement. An estimated 50,000 people have already fled South Africa amid rising tension, with thousands more internally displaced.
—State Response. President Ramaphosa announced a biometric registry and specialized courts to accelerate deportations, while penalizing employers of undocumented workers.
—Economic Pressure. The crackdown unfolds against a backdrop of unemployment exceeding 43% by broad definition, fueling populist scapegoating of foreign nationals.
South Africa’s anti-migrant crackdown has triggered a mass exodus of African foreign nationals, as vigilante violence and accelerated state deportations reshape the social and economic landscape of the continent’s most industrialised nation.
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A Nationwide Hunt for Undocumented Migrants
Since early 2026, citizen-led movements have organised street patrols and shop raids in Pretoria, Johannesburg, and Durban, demanding that undocumented foreigners present papers or face expulsion. Human Rights Watch documented that the group “March & March” led demonstrations in April and May that degenerated into violent and sometimes fatal attacks on African and Asian foreign nationals.
The vigilante campaign coalesced around a widely circulated ultimatum: undocumented migrants must leave South Africa by 30 June 2026 or face arrest, detention, or worse. Flyers bearing the Zulu battle-cry “Abahambe!”—“They must go!”—appeared in townships, and France 24 reported that around 50,000 people had already left the country as the deadline approached.
The State Steps In: Deportations and Biometric Registers
President Cyril Ramaphosa addressed the nation on 7 June 2026, announcing a formal crackdown that included penalising businesses employing undocumented migrants and creating a biometric registry for every individual in the country. He simultaneously urged citizens not to take the law into their own hands, but rights groups warned the government’s rhetoric risked legitimising the vigilante agenda.
Home Affairs Minister Leon Schreiber, appointed in mid-2024, confirmed the repatriation of roughly 2,745 irregular African nationals in a single week in June. His department reported over 40,000 arrests of undocumented migrants since January, while Justice Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi announced that 53,499 foreign nationals had been processed for deportation in about five weeks.
The Economic Calculus Behind the anti-migrant crackdown
The crackdown is inseparable from South Africa’s punishing economic reality: unemployment has exceeded 43 percent by the broad definition since 2024, while the country registers one of the highest Gini coefficients in the world. In this environment, foreign nationals—heavily present in construction, security, informal retail, and domestic work—become convenient scapegoats for collapsing public services and job scarcity.
The informal economy is already absorbing the shock. Operations like “New Broom” in downtown Johannesburg have demolished corrugated-iron shops, many foreign-owned, altering supply chains in low-income neighbourhoods.
While some formal-sector employers may welcome a restoration of labour-market order, others quietly depend on cheaper migrant labour and now face prison terms if caught hiring undocumented workers.
A Regional and Geopolitical Reckoning
The images of Black South Africans attacking Black African migrants have circulated widely across the continent, drawing official protests from Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe, and Malawi. Governments have chartered buses and planes to repatriate terrified citizens, while South Africa’s credibility as a champion of pan-Africanism and the African Renaissance—a mantle it carried proudly under Thabo Mbeki—suffers severe damage.
For investors and diplomats tracking the great-power contest, the violence complicates South Africa’s positioning as a stable BRICS gateway. As explored in our pillar series Africa: The New Scramble, the country’s ability to attract capital for mining, infrastructure, and logistics hinges on perceptions of stability and rule of law, both of which are now under strain.
A Dual Migration Strategy: Expel the Poor, Court the Skilled
Beneath the headlines of raids and deportations, Pretoria is quietly pursuing a segmented approach to migration. While low-skilled undocumented Africans face accelerated expulsion, Home Affairs has simultaneously cleared around 62 percent of a decade-old visa backlog and introduced a points-based immigration system with carve-outs for remote workers and digital professionals.
This dual strategy reveals the money-power logic at work: the government seeks to neutralise a politically explosive issue by visibly removing the most vulnerable migrants, while keeping the door ajar for higher-skilled individuals who can contribute to tax revenues and competitiveness. Whether this balancing act can survive the populist momentum it has unleashed remains an open question.
What to Watch Next
The immediate aftermath of the 30 June deadline will be critical. Police tightened security nationwide as the date approached, but the vigilante groups that set the ultimatum have no legal authority, and any further violence could force Ramaphosa into an even more repressive posture or a belated defence of constitutional protections.
For Latin American readers accustomed to their own region’s struggles with migration, inequality, and populist scapegoating, South Africa’s trajectory offers a cautionary parallel. A nation that once promised a rainbow compact is now learning how quickly economic desperation can curdle into nativist fury, with consequences that ripple far beyond its borders.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is driving the current anti-migrant crackdown in South Africa?
The crackdown is fuelled by unemployment exceeding 43 percent, extreme inequality, and deteriorating public services. Political parties and vigilante groups have channelled public frustration into scapegoating foreign nationals, accusing them of stealing jobs and overwhelming hospitals, while the government responds with accelerated deportations to manage domestic pressure.
How many people have been deported or displaced in the 2026 wave?
Justice Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi reported that 53,499 foreign nationals were processed for deportation in roughly five weeks. France 24 estimates that around 50,000 people have already left the country, while Home Affairs confirmed over 40,000 arrests of undocumented migrants since January 2026.
How does the crackdown affect South Africa’s role in BRICS and regional diplomacy?
The violence and deportations have drawn official protests from Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Malawi, and other African states, damaging South Africa’s soft power and pan-African credentials. For BRICS partners and global investors, the instability raises risk premiums and complicates Pretoria’s pitch as a stable gateway to the continent.
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