June 29, 2026 by

Thousands seek evacuation as S’Africa braces for anti-immigrant protests

  • Policemen deployed, several cities braced for unrest
  • Mozambique, Malawi, Zimbabwe struggle to get citizens home

Thousands of Malawian migrants queued for processing at a makeshift camp in the South African city of Durban ​at the weekend while hundreds of Zimbabweans slept on the pavement outside their consulate in Cape Town

All had the same goal: to ‌leave South Africa before nationwide anti-immigrant protests tomorrow, which many fear will descend into violence

“We are scared because you never know what people are planning to do to you. It’s not right to wait and see what will happen,” Ebrahim Moosa, 37, said

He was with his wife in a snaking line of people, some with babies on their ​backs, hoping to catch a bus to Malawi from Durban

South Africa has been gripped by a wave of xenophobic protests and sometimes deadly ​attacks in recent weeks, forcing many foreigners to flee or be chased from their homes

Anti-immigrant groups have set June 30 as a deadline for all undocumented migrants to leave. Several cities are bracing for unrest, even as the government has pleaded with citizens ​not to take immigration enforcement into their own hands

“We are appealing to all those who will be marching to respect the police,” said Phumelele Makoba, acting ​police commissioner for KwaZulu-Natal province, which is expected to be one of the hotspots

Police have promised a massive deployment to ensure stability. President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Thursday: “Our security forces are ready.”

March and March, the main organisation behind the protests, has said that it is not calling for violence. But it has added it will not take responsibility for anything bad that happens on June 30

Xenophobic violence is a recurring issue in South Africa, where some blame immigrants — mostly from other African countries — for everything from crime and unemployment to crowded public health facilities

Ramaphosa has warned citizens not to make foreigners scapegoats for these problems, which ‌he attributed mainly to the legacy of apartheid

South Africa remains deeply unequal and economic growth has been sluggish for years. But it still has the largest economy in Africa and draws job seekers from neighbouring countries

Mozambican Antonio Njive, who had done odd jobs in South Africa since 2019, left on June 1 after his house was burned down in a spate of violence that killed five of his compatriots

“I left home without clothes. Everything was burned,” he said by phone from Chibuto, Mozambique

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South African

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