South Africa arrests over 900 after anti-migrant protests

South African Police Service officers form a security line during anti-migrant protests as authorities intensified deployments following nationwide demonstrations that led to more than 900 arrests.Photo: Rodger Bosch / AFP

South African police said they arrested more than 900 people following nationwide anti-migrant protests, marking one of the country’s largest security operations in response to unrest linked to immigration tensions in recent years.

The arrests came after demonstrations across the country on Tuesday, following an unofficial June 30 deadline issued by anti-immigration groups calling for undocumented migrants to leave South Africa. According to Reuters, Deputy National Police Commissioner Tebello Mosikili said police monitored 120 marches, of which 108 remained peaceful while 12 required intervention.

The latest police operation underscores the growing political and social tensions surrounding migration in South Africa. Beyond domestic security concerns, the unrest has raised fresh questions about the safety of foreign nationals, regional labour mobility and relations between South Africa and neighbouring countries whose citizens live and work there.

According to police, cited by Reuters, those arrested were held for a range of alleged offences, including immigration violations, public violence, robbery, looting and harbouring undocumented migrants. Authorities stressed that not all arrests were directly linked to violent protest activity.

Security forces reinforced deployments in five of South Africa’s nine provinces, while members of the armed forces were sent to Hillbrow, a densely populated Johannesburg suburb with a significant migrant population.

Why South Africa attracts migrants

As the continent’s most industrialised economy, South Africa has long attracted workers, traders, students and asylum seekers from across Africa. Employment opportunities in mining, construction, agriculture, retail and the informal economy have made the country a key destination for migrants from Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi, Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and elsewhere.

That migration has increasingly become a flashpoint as South Africa continues to grapple with high unemployment, sluggish economic growth, rising living costs and public frustration over crime, border security, service delivery and broader migration policy.

Migration debate remains contested

Groups behind the demonstrations argue that undocumented migrants contribute to unemployment, criminal activity and pressure on public services.

However, migration researchers and human rights organisations have consistently cautioned against attributing South Africa’s broader economic and governance challenges primarily to migrants. Reuters noted in a separate analysis that migrants account for roughly 4.1 percent of South Africa’s population, while available labour market and prison data do not support broad claims that foreigners are the principal drivers of crime or unemployment.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has repeatedly urged South Africans not to scapegoat migrants for the country’s socioeconomic challenges, arguing that immigration enforcement should be carried out through lawful institutions rather than public intimidation or vigilante action. His position echoes earlier warnings that blaming migrants will not solve South Africa’s economic challenges.

Rights groups have also warned that while governments have a legitimate responsibility to enforce immigration laws, enforcement should respect due process and avoid discrimination or violence against migrant communities.

Regional implications

The latest unrest is likely to be closely monitored across Southern Africa, where millions of people depend on cross-border employment and trade.

Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Malawi have historically been among the largest sources of migrant workers in South Africa, while Nigerians and other West African nationals also maintain sizeable business and professional communities in the country.

Renewed tensions could place additional pressure on regional governments to provide consular assistance for affected citizens and may complicate broader efforts by the Southern African Development Community to promote regional integration and labour mobility.

The unrest could also weigh on investor confidence if perceptions of political instability deepen.

The renewed unrest has also revived debate over its underlying causes. Former President Thabo Mbeki has argued that South Africa’s governance and socioeconomic failures have fuelled xenophobia, rather than migration itself.

Political pressure grows

Migration has become an increasingly prominent political issue in South Africa amid continuing debates over economic reform and immigration enforcement. South Africa has experienced periodic outbreaks of anti-foreigner violence since 2008, with previous incidents drawing condemnation from governments across Africa. Political divisions have also widened, with several South African political parties rejecting recent anti-illegal immigration protests while continuing to support lawful border enforcement.

The government has promised stronger immigration enforcement, including tighter border controls and action against employers found to be hiring undocumented migrants unlawfully. At the same time, officials have insisted that immigration policy must be enforced through the rule of law rather than by self-appointed groups.

Credit: Africabriefing

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