Why is he not trending??
Heโs a Ghanaian ๐ฌ๐ญ veteran telling the truth, heโs saying he doesnโt blame SA ๐ฟ๐ฆ they started it as Ghanaians for the same reasons & many Nigerians died when it happened!
Why thereโs so much noise when South Africans are doing it???
@daddyhope@daddyhope " if one hospital can allegedly be looted of R2 billion, and then someone chooses to go after a poor ILLEGAL Zimbabwean woman selling tomatoes at a traffic"
Got it? ILLEGAL!!
To every African country bullying South Africa. Stop ๐ pathologizing them. #SouthAfrica is trying to fix their damaged communities while yours is like THIS๐๐ฝ๐๐ฝ๐๐ฝ
Lesotho residence advise his parliament member who said south africans working in lesotho should leave Lesotho.
Dansin . Credo . Jordan . SANTACO . Lwandle . #BritishGP
The United Kingdom ๐ฌ๐ง is in solidarity with South Africa ๐ฟ๐ฆ with our illegal immigration fight, the world is watching South Africa we will win this war!! #PutSouthAfricaFirst
To every South African that has been preaching how xenophobic we are. Your ignorance comes at a price, we donโt benefit from having foreigners in our country, we are running at a deficit. The money meant to grow our economy is flowing out of our borders.Every year, South Africa watches billions of rands leave its borders. Between 2016 and 2024 alone, over R112.6 billion was remitted from South Africa to SADC countries. R19.3 billion left in 2024 alone, with Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, and Malawi accounting for 90% of all payments. Zimbabwe received R47.2 billion between 2020 and 2024. And these are only the formal, recorded flows, an estimated R3.5 billion more moves informally, often through unregulated channels. Meanwhile, the World Bank reports that Africa received 19.8 billion, Ghana 3.0 billion, Uganda $1.49 billion.
These remittances are not investments in South Africa. They are not building our roads, funding our schools, or creating jobs for our youth. They are extracted wealth earned here, sent home. And they are enough to build entire nations. Nigeria's $19.8 billion could fund universal healthcare. Zimbabwe's $3 billion could rebuild its education system. But instead, the money flows out, and the burden of housing, feeding, and healthcare for those who send it remains on South African taxpayers.
Foreign nationals in South Africa often work in low-wage sectors, undercutting local workers, while sending the bulk of their earnings back home. The South Africa to Malawi corridor is among the most expensive in the region, with costs exceeding 17%. South Africa's migrants are paying an average of 19.4% to send $200 to Malawi, making it the costliest corridor in the region. Yet even at these prices, billions flow out.
This is why we are called xenophobic. Not because we hate foreigners. Because we are being used. We are being bled dry. Our infrastructure crumbles while their economies grow on our backs. We are not a country, we are a cash cow. The remittances that leave our borders could build hospitals in Harare, schools in Lilongwe, roads in Maputo. Instead, we are left with the cost of overcrowded clinics, under-resourced schools, and communities that feel abandoned by their own government.
We are not xenophobic. We are tired. We are tired of being the continent's ATM, tired of carrying burdens that are not ours, tired of being called hateful while they send their billions home and leave us with the scraps.
It is time for South Africa to ask, how much longer will we be the engine that powers other nations while our own people suffer? Enough. The billions must stay. The borders must be secured. And our people must come first. ๐ฟ๐ฆโ๐พ
Elite assassin Jack misses the perfect shot because of one glance. What follows is pure tension,bathroom takedown, car chase, and a de@dly family thre@t