Warras- fought illegal infestation.
Daniel Letsie- fought corruption in social housing
The corrupt have been accused of planting looters to sabotage peaceful protests before. Do you really think they would hesitate to harm a South African child to discredit the 30 June movement?
They can’t cripple the movement because it’s backed by no funding. 🔥 Mind you this is a community made up of people who are mostly unemployed, and unfairly priced out of their own local businesses but okuncane abanako, they’ve brought forth. You know the people are fed up !!🇿🇦❤️
First time in our history we have Patriotic Police, siyaziqhenya ngamaphoyisa ethu aseMzansi Afrika, abafowethu, Omalume babashana. To Foreigners in our Police system start packing, asidlali la
Ghana will never do this. Ghana is open. Is Ghana actually open?
- A Cameroonian 🇨🇲
A Cameroonian shares her perspective on recent developments from Ghana interior minister regarding improving security on Ghana and Togo border.
#Ghana#Togo#SouthAfrica#GH#SA#TG #Illegalimmigrants #Africanews #Updates #Politics #Geopolitics #SA
🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦🌍🇹🇬🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🌍🇹🇬🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🇹🇬
@eNCA Recycling tired propaganda is very expected of this disreputable media outlet. The journalists fear unemployment too.
Illegal foreigners are only surviving imaginary shit, terrorizing our locals, free-loading on SASSA and RAF… and making senseless demands in South Africa.
@eNCA Recycling tired propaganda is very expected of this disreputable media outlet. The journalists fear unemployment too.
Illegal foreigners are only surviving imaginary shit, terrorizing our locals, free-loading on SASSA and RAF… and making senseless demands in South Africa.
Constitutional Review Committee Legal Advisor Warns that Informal Trading Can Not Be Reserved for South Africans Only Like Other Countries Because it "may result in a limitation of the right to human dignity"
Co-founder of South Africans for Constitutional Reform (SACR) Princy Mthombeni shared that the Constitutional Review Committee received firm legal advice against restricting informal trade to citizens only. The advisor warned this could undermine constitutional protections and South Africa’s international commitments, referencing a key Supreme Court of Appeal judgment on refugee rights.
The Somali Association of South Africa case against the Limpopo Department of Economic Development, Environment and Tourism established that Section 22 does not bar asylum seekers and refugees from self-employment in spaza and tuck shops. The court ruled they are entitled to apply for informal trading licences when facing barriers to wage work.
“If some refugee or asylum seeker be unable to obtain wage-earning employment and is on the brink of starvation, which brings with it humiliation and degradation, that person can only sustain him or herself by engaging in trade,” the advisor quoted from the judgment, stressing reliance on Section 10 dignity rights.
“The court consequently held that the concerned asylum seekers and refugees were in fact entitled to apply for the relevant informal trading licenses based on the right to dignity,” the legal advisor added, noting that changes would require amendments to the Businesses Act of 1991.
“Restricting informal trade to citizens may result in a limitation of the right to human dignity as guaranteed by Section 10 of the Constitution,” the advisor stated, highlighting risks under the African Charter, ICCPR, ICESCR, and the 1951 UN Refugees Convention.
Committee discussions also stressed that many public concerns, including a proposal to amend the Preamble to “South Africa belongs to its citizens,” should be addressed through ordinary legislation rather than constitutional changes to avoid conflicts.
Their brazen entitlement is insane. Abahambe
Non-South African countries have mentally deranged citizens. It’s no wonder South Africans are forced to put up with their insults and demands in SA when they’re here illegally. It’s in their rude nature.
So South Africa does not only have a nearly nonexistent porous border, it has a faux Home Affairs department. Home Affairs in SA just exists to aid illegals in stealing South African identities, and illegally marrying South Africans off without their knowledge.
3 Important Questions by ATM Leader Zungula in Parliament:
1. How many foreign prisoners got bail & never returned? —NPA: We don't Know.
2. How many MPs & Cabinet have dual citizenship?— Home Affairs: unknown.
3. How much spent on court interpreters?— DOJ: Over R76 million.
An ATM leader raised a series of parliamentary questions this month focusing on foreign nationals in South Africa’s justice and governance systems, with government departments providing limited or no data on some of the issues while confirming significant spending in others.
The first question focused on how many foreign prisoners who were granted bail failed to return to court. The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) responded that it does not have electronic records capturing how many accused persons, including foreign nationals, were released on bail and later absconded. The NPA further indicated that while it records cases involving foreign nationals in both regional and district courts, it does not track post-bail compliance or return rates in a way that allows such figures to be verified.
The second question raised concerns about how many members of Parliament and Cabinet hold dual citizenship. The Department of Home Affairs responded that it does not have the required data to confirm or quantify dual citizenship status among public office bearers. This mirrors broader limitations in government record systems regarding citizenship tracking across different categories of individuals, including officials and public representatives.
The third question dealt with the cost of foreign language interpretation in South African courts. The Department of Justice and Constitutional Development confirmed that R76 million was spent on interpretation services for non-official languages between April 2024 and March 2025. The department said services are provided in both official and foreign languages, with demand driven largely by court cases involving foreign nationals. It also noted that thousands of cases involving foreign nationals were processed during the period, contributing to the need for interpreters across multiple languages, with Shona identified as one of the highest-cost languages.
@Princymthombeni@thabomthombeni3@MkhontoweSizwex South African citizens do not even enjoy such freedoms in people’s countries. Illegals enter SA, infest our cities, gentrify our suburbs and dilapidate our buildings. It’s absurdity. We don’t even have a patriotic media outlet, all of them are plastering xenophobia-propaganda.