SPECIAL DOCUMENTARY ON XENOPHOBIA IN SOUTH AFRICA

SPECIAL DOCUMENTARY ON XENOPHOBIA IN SOUTH AFRICA



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44 thoughts on “SPECIAL DOCUMENTARY ON XENOPHOBIA IN SOUTH AFRICA

  1. I am sorry but this goes to show the ungratefulness of the illegal immigrants, not once i have heard even a thank you to south africa for even giving them the chance to have a better life. Nigeria is literally now a banditry state where kidnapping has become the business of the day, and instead of leaving peacefully back to Nigeria to fight for the liberation of your country, all I hear is arrogance and audacity by illegal immigrants. For me, this is my unfiltered view and not sorry, this is a positive SPARK by south africa to the rest of africa that we should demand better from our governments.

  2. Don't you guys have problems in your own countries, instead of spending time worrying about South Africa, if you have a problem with xenophobia, then tell your people to go back home. We are not responsible for your own governments.

  3. What's funny is that the whole of Africa must unite in South Africa, while South Africa lived in peace over the years, governments should have paved a way forward having heard several ignored out crys by South African Citizens over the years. Other countries have no tolerance to illegal immigration tolerated by South Africa, so in the context of African unity, who is fooling who. South Africa is cleaning its house , so should other African countries so we can truly unite in Africa, Africans

  4. Unfortunately the host does not have the intellect to carry such a conversation. Instead of bringing experts to look at fact and statistics, he relies on uncontextualised opinions and feelings. This anti-black migrants movement in SA is rooted in self-hated and internalised racism. The fact that their country is the most unequal countryhehe in the world is not the fault of Africans but of the legacy of the apartheid regime. The founder of the Dudulu movement even said to his face that she has issues with documented Black migrants who are legally employed !!! How do you call this if not xenophobia ? Someone is a legal migrant, work and pay taxes, yet you hate them because you envy their situation. Does she imply that South employers discriminate against other South Africans ? And what about the migrants who have ligitimate businesses and get looted and harmed ? She does not have an issue with the fact that 70% of the wealth of her country is owned by Whites. Her only concerned is for the African migrant earning 1500 rands per months. These people are thugs. They loot, steal, brutalise and kill when given the chance !! They need to be called out for what they are – Cowards and thieves !!! They have become their former oppressors. They are the shame of the continent !

  5. The problem of South Africa is that they were reconditioned by apartheid.
    Many of the poor people attacking the foreigners have no skills and are uneducated. Even if people leave their country they would still continue to suffer because their minds have been conditioned to be dependent on handouts from their government.
    They need help. It might take another 50 years living with other nationalities to unlearn living as a slave of apartheid. Now they have driven the black people away it might take another 100years to unlearn this colo mentality.

    Oyibo don do them something. If you ask me, leave them make them serve their sentence, they are too hostile.

  6. There is NO XENOPHOBIA in South Africa. Even South African authorities have confirmed that. Gaslighting SA won't work this time. It's better to talk TO South Africa instead of talking AT South Africa. Coexistence is about mutual respect.

  7. @WithChude Thanks for all you have done to make this information a reality. However, the information contained in this video is little to the eyes compared to the deep core reality of things and challenges in South Africa.

    Based on this context, get the right people with an in-depth understanding and real-life experience because "there is more than meets the eye."

  8. Africa's unity cannot be judged by the failures, mistakes, or challenges of any single nation. South Africa is not Africa, Nigeria is not Africa, Libya is not Africa, and no country alone represents the hopes, struggles, and aspirations of over 1.4 billion Africans.

    The concerns raised in these comments are valid. Illegal immigration, unemployment, insecurity, xenophobia, human trafficking, slavery in Libya, terrorism in Nigeria, political failures, corruption, and economic hardship are all African issues that deserve attention. We cannot condemn one injustice while remaining silent about another. Every African life matters, regardless of nationality.

    However, acknowledging these realities should not lead us to abandon the dream of African unity. In fact, they are the very reasons why unity is needed. Unity does not mean ignoring problems. It means working together to solve them. It means recognizing that the suffering of a Nigerian, South African, Libyan, Ghanaian, Kenyan, Congolese, or Zimbabwean is ultimately an African concern.

    History reminds us that when Africa fought colonialism, apartheid, and oppression, we stood together. South Africans received support from across the continent during the struggle against apartheid. Today, when tensions arise between Africans, we must not allow frustration, politics, or economic hardship to erase that shared history.

    No nation has a monopoly on victimhood, and no nation has a monopoly on blame. South Africans have legitimate concerns about crime, unemployment, and illegal immigration. Foreign Africans also deserve dignity, safety, and protection from violence. These truths can coexist.

    The answer is not division. The answer is better leadership, stronger institutions, fair immigration policies, economic opportunities, and honest conversations. Africa's challenges are interconnected, and so are our destinies.

    African unity is not the absence of disagreement. It is the decision to remain brothers and sisters despite our disagreements. It is the understanding that our collective future is stronger than our individual frustrations.

    An injury to one African should concern all Africans. A success in one African nation should inspire all Africans. Our borders may divide us politically, but our history, culture, struggles, and future bind us together.

    Africa must not become a continent where Africans fear Africans. We have already suffered enough from divisions imposed by others. The next chapter of Africa's story must be written through cooperation, mutual respect, accountability, and unity.

    Because at the end of the day, before we are Nigerian, South African, Libyan, Ghanaian, Kenyan, or Zimbabwean, we are Africans.

  9. When you are getting to the truth exactly you cut it very short…. from 36:00 to 37:15, when they are taking you to see what SAns are complaining about, and when you see it you cut it short.

    I sense some biasness here. Immediately you jumped to the "victims" so they can keep mourning about their situation. Please be fair, the truth shall set all of us free.

  10. Here is the problem with you people ,the energy you have to speak about south african issues it's on another level ,but yet your country's issues nothing 😂………aowe banna let us be yoh.

  11. Now do a documentary about the bandits in Nigera, or the cultists in your country or the ones in SA who are rivalries and chopping each other like ants, because of drug turfs.

  12. I have always known and said, even if I had a sponsored luxury trip to South Africa, I will turn it down. I watched a report on South Africa in 2006 and I knew they are not a hospitable people and are easily prone to violence.

  13. Ask them why the violent approach? They have no justification for attacking unarmed foreigners. Are all south africans law abiding? They are desperately clutching at straws for an excuse.

  14. Try and meet SA blacks outside South Africa like in the United States, UK and you will see in their faces that they hate their own blacks. I think it is the torture they passed through during apartheid. Their parents were not loved, beaten and tortured, and that has affected their upbringing. This is the hate in the faces of many black South Africans. While it is not their direct fault, I would advise many black foreigners in SA to leave. Xenophobia will keep reoccurring whether you are legal or illegal because it is a way of life in SA.

  15. To the White gentleman : There are thousands of illegal immigrants who obtained fske refugee status, or have fake study permits which were facilitated by our corrupt Home Affsirs. Somalis who carry vopies of the same fake document to provd there is a huge invasion problm here. There is no free health service for illegal immigrants and the government officials have been intepreting their own constitution incorrectly. Ouf Healgh services are collapsing and the government si folkng out free madication to foreigners who have systematically taken ghese mddicines out of thd country to go and sell in the neighbouring countries like Zimbabwe. The people havd caused so much unyold damage and degradation of ghis country's rdsources and infrastructure and therefore they do not deserve any
    sympathy from anybody who is not affected by their unsocial behaviour.

  16. This man who covered his face is hiding something. Is either he's not Nigerian or he was once a criminal in Nigeria. Otherwise why shoukd you be running away from your entire family and friends.? Nigeria government should investigate this man before bringing him to Nigeria. He even said he doesn't have a Nigerian passport. That's a red flag already. He must be part of the fools that do call Nigeria zoo and tore their Nigerian passports

  17. I love the perspective of the woman… most of those people stranded didn't plan to overstay in SA. In a sane country they should have just been deported back to their country instead of arresting people who are already struggling. The South African government is very irresponsible and lazy.

  18. The practice of pressuring undocumented migrants to leave South Africa sets a concerning precedent. Immigration policy and enforcement are the responsibility of government, not private citizens. Notably, many departing migrants leave with valuable skills that could benefit their home countries. Governments and the private sector should consider engaging these individuals, or incentivizing South African companies to establish operations abroad where that expertise can be utilized.

  19. Whenever I meet a South African who wants to chase away black Africans, I want to ask: wait, wait, wait. You say illegal Africans are drug dealers, and you say they took your job. Sir, are you reporting a crime or updating your résumé?

  20. You'll always jakpa since all your attentions is on SA,when are you doing docu regarding useless government,banditt,kIdnapped kids to name the fewAccountability is golden,No truth without evidence

  21. I think what the Career Consular made mention of was hasten generalization; when we actually introspect we will discover that she was justified (based on assumption and not statistics). Sincerely, this whole issues is twisted! The issues of humanity is always complex and convoluted.

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