June 30 | Protests against undocumented immigration part 2

June 30 | Protests against undocumented immigration part 2



Our focus today is on the nationwide protest action against undocumented immigration.

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28 thoughts on “June 30 | Protests against undocumented immigration part 2

  1. …if the illegal migrants are not problem ànd government is the problem, why are you not organizing a March to government…you are just a hypocrite…

  2. These Politicians are the ones who fuel the anger to say the sufferings of are not unique to South Africa,you should be mad to globalise corrupted that is done by calculating.

  3. When a corrupt government thats destroyed everything and then convinces the weak minded that its something that ended 32yrs ago….thats the issue

  4. Deeply unfair that Africa suffers from such irresponsible governance. How can a government wait until protests erupt before acknowledging an immigration crisis? Meanwhile, neighboring leaders mismanage their own countries, driving their citizens to flee. This is nothing short of better inviting colonialism.

  5. If government fails people shall govern, that what we're doing and we won't stop until we win,not you not even government can stop us,this is what we're going to do every day until we head

  6. Xenophobia south africa must pay for their sins. They’re killing fellow blacks Africans.
    All African countries must boycott MTN and close all south african companies operating in other countries

  7. The joblessness was in SA during Apartheid and after Apartheid. No one is talking about the WEALTH INEQUALITY in SA. That's the problem. A white person makes two to three times more than a Black person in SA. Steve Biko spoke about this and he was murdered. Chris Hani spoke about this, and the corruption of the ANC and he was murdered for it. 10% of the population owns 75% of the country's wealth. SA is the most racially unequal country in the world. But keep using foreigners as a scapegoat for the real issues. Unemployment creates poverty and poverty creates crime.

  8. THIS REPORTERS AND PEOPLE NOT REALLY AFFECTED ,JUMP IN FRONT THE FLIPPIN CAMERA ,OPINIONATED , AND JUST TALK ,WHILE THE REAL AFFECTED CITIZENS GET ZERO COVERAGE , THEY JUST DONT WANT TO HEAR THE REAL STORIES,THIS IS NOT ONLY ABOUT JOBS ITS ABOUT ILLEGALS CAUSING MULTIPLE CRIMES AND INFLUX DROWNING CITIZENS LETS US BE POOR IN PEACE GOVERNMENT MUST FIX THE BORDERS ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

  9. As a SA'CAN,this is a very very sad situation that's playing out currently in SA,ofcourse I won't say that the uprising of SA'CAN blacks are wrong but unfortunately what's happening to all these poor foreighners and got treated like animals, I solely put the blame 100% on our government for allowing all this over such a long period of time and now it seems there are nothing to be reasoned about when it comes to the masses.The government could have started this process long time ago already in a orderly and more humane manner but no way,as usual doing their own dirty things and now the masses in a total mood of utter madness without realizing because of most of these foreighners life got also very convenient for alotvof SA'CANS and this will cause an enormous ripple effect that cannot be solved over night cause who will invest in those jobs and services rendered by those people overnight???…I'm sorry to say but what I can see coming,because of this government their own will be now facing another few years on the back foot.

  10. why don’t you go after white people who despoiled you of everything and killed you instead of persecuting your own brothers. Shame on you !! What about Orania a town where you are not allowed to stay

  11. It sound like Most African leaders and the world at large does not know where to call xhenophobia, what do you call the hatred of undocumented immigrants? What do you call the hatred of documented immigrants

  12. Nigeria's lawyer and politician Jaja Wachuku, who was "widely respected" as Foreign Affairs Minister, intervened with the South African government and helped save Nelson Mandela and others from the death penalty at the 1963–64 Rivonia Trial.[8] A year earlier, in his 1962 diary, from Lagos: Nigeria, Nelson Mandela wrote: "Friday 18 May 1962: 1pm: We meet Mr Jaja Wachuku and his staff and have a profitable discussion. Saturday 19 May 1962: We have lunch with Jaja Wachuku.

    South Africa 🇿🇦 have the right to ask both documented and undocumented Nigerians 🇳🇬 or Africans to leave. All your government should have done was to make it official with a cut of date. Harassment and violence from some people is hypocrisy and not right. The damage has been done.

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