On the day of the “March and March” protest, I look at both sides of South Africa’s foreigner debate: many migrants come here because failed policies have wrecked parts of the region, but porous borders, poor documentation, and cheap labour create real problems for local workers, policing, and crime prevention.
I also cover an Eastern Cape case involving an illegal Malawian worker allegedly exploited with long hours, wage deductions, poor pay, bad accommodation, threats, and dismissal during a storm. The broader point is simple: illegal status makes workers vulnerable, undercuts locals, and allows South Africans to benefit from cheap labour while complaining about the consequences.
@rwanda_air25952 Good day, I hope you are well. I recent missed my flight from SA to Nigeria via Rwanda air and used another flight to as an alternative. When returning from Nigeria, I was denied on boarding because I missed my initial flight. Kindly advise on this is
@PhutiSemenya14 Unfortunately, illegal gambling is worse than legal gambling. No regulations, no player protection. It also generates just about similar revenue, untaxed unchecked
@PhutiSemenya14 This new directive by the Ethiopian government does not solve the problem, in fact the government will lose tax income and punters will bet on illegal betting sites. 22,000 employees set to also lose employment
@matinyarare@matinyarare my brother you are always dragging SA and never Zimbabwe. Seems you are clearly enjoying this negative engagement towards SA and it's people, but yet here you are in SA.