South Africans are deeply frustrated and with good reason about illegal immigration and the pressure it places on already scarce opportunities.
But the real crisis is not the immigrants themselves. The root cause is our failure, over the past fifteen years, to deliver inclusive economic growth that creates enough jobs, dignity and hope for our own people.
This failure has been driven by three systemic issues we can no longer ignore:
• A collapse in the rule of law that has enabled corruption, criminality, land invasions, illegal migration, and the brazen theft of electricity and water.
• Bureaucracy and red tape that continue to strangle enterprise, deter investment and kill job creation.
• Incompetent and, in too many cases, corrupt leadership in key positions across government, state-owned enterprises and parts of the private sector.
As leaders, we must have the courage to look in the mirror and ask a difficult but necessary question: How have we allowed these conditions to take root and persist?
This question is not about blame. It is about responsibility and that is precisely why it is empowering. It places the power to change things back where it belongs: with us. We are not helpless. We are not victims of forces beyond our control. By focusing on what lies within our sphere of influence our decisions, our standards, our willingness to confront uncomfortable truths and act decisively, we can begin to reverse the damage we have helped create.
The time for self-criticism and honest reflection is now. The time for excuses has long passed. South Africa’s future will be determined by leaders who are prepared to own their part in the mess and do the hard, disciplined work required to fix it.
Forceful deportations underway in KZN. Illegal immigrants are removed from communities by Patriots who are working hand in hand with the police. The public is allowed to arrest criminals as enshrined in our constitution. Warm-ups for 30 June ✊🏾
The president of South Africa is basically on stage, telling the entire internet that the state has failed in its mandate and that the ANC is incapable of governing a country.
Now you know why rural areas can't have @Starlink
It's absolutely criminal that over 1,800 qualified South African doctors sit unemployed due to "no funding" — yet government hospitals have money to keep hiring foreign doctors, especially Cubans over our graduates. Unfknbelievable
@CyrilRamaphosa@Lefa89896428 Section 42 of the Criminal Act allows for citizens to arrest criminals, illegal immigrnats are criminals that must be arrested. “Any private person may arrest criminals who commits crimes. End of story
“South Africa faces…” Unfortunate, isn’t it, to find ourselves in this situation? How has this sad state of affairs come about, I wonder? And why is it so “persistent”? If only we knew. Terrible to be such victims of circumstance.
Political analyst Frans Cronje argues that the ANC’s dominance is fading as years of declining living standards drives voters to seek alternatives they believe can better advance their interests.
https://t.co/CunoOf4XQM