South Africa is learning the tough lesson all Venusians have to learn at some point: being too nice and too lax with your boundaries (borders) invites disrespect. They don't appreciate you more. Instead, they take advantage and they won't stop until you learn to say no.
If even developed countries can’t handle it, how do you expect a developing country like South Africa to handle an influx of migrants especially illegal ones? 🤔🤔🤔
They are rioting because the deportation process requires documentation. And documentation includes fingerprints... which would link them to crimes and prevent them from coming back.
Five million jobs are possible. South Africa does not have a shortage of people willing to work, it has a shortage of political will. Tackle corruption, secure the borders, heavy taxes, fix infrastructure, energy issues and support for small businesses. Jobs will follow.
@FusionistRSA Goodluck to anyone who is still trying to reason with Africans from failed countries.. the way they reason shows you exactly why their countries are the way they are. I mean imagine trying to get into another country with an expired visa and then throwing wild accusations
Entering any country without the proper documents is called a crime,unless that country is south Africa then it's called Pan Africanism or African unity
The real heroes never left. They stayed in the townships. They faced the bullets. They buried their comrades. They built this nation with their bare hands. And now the ones who ran want to tell us how to share it? The audacity is beyond belief.
@ThetoThakane Those who were there, including the lady know the truth, but let's say you're the child of democracy and can apply your mind logically, do you think all those township houses could have been built using white bricklayers, plumbers, carpenters, tylers and electricians?
So now you understand the feeling of being expected to suddenly come up with money for something you never planned or budgeted for. You can't even raise a once off fund to assist with the repatriation of your own citizens, yet South Africans are expected to somehow find the resources year after year to accommodate the costs associated with large numbers of illegal aliens. Then, when taxpayers question the strain on public services and finances, they're branded xenophobic. Financial realities suddenly become important when the bill lands on your doorstep, but when South Africans raise the same concerns, they're told to stop complaining and carry on paying.