@the_ceo99 In actual fact the enablers of the Jonasis of this world are the very women who claim to be victims,they sacrifice everything and everybody for proximity to wealth.
@KingLou_Louvuyo Maybe some other time you will dissect the women's appetite to sacrifice everything and everybody in pursuit of wealth.i would say the women are the enablers of the Jonasis of this world.
The 2026 anti-immigration campaigns in South Africa have increasingly merged with localized ethnic mobilization, resulting in heightened intimidation and targeting of both foreign nationals and specific domestic language groups.
Vigilante factions and populist political entities are weaponizing socio-economic grievances—such as high unemployment and strained public resources—to stoke xenophobic and ethno-nationalist sentiments ahead of the upcoming local government elections.
The Convergence of Xenophobia and Ethnic Mobilization
Political Exploitation: Prominent political parties and populist factions are framing undocumented migrants as direct competitors for jobs and municipal services.
Regional and Tribal Dimensions: The mobilization has taken on distinct geographic and linguistic characteristics, particularly in epicentres like KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng.
Analysts point out that certain campaigns heavily mirror the regional networks and "tribal" undertones observed in previous cycles of civil unrest.
Digital Amplification: Social media networks are driving coordinate nationalist campaigns using localized hashtags like #Abahambe ("They must go").
This rhetoric blends anti-immigration activism with strict law-and-order messaging to dictate who "belongs" in specific communities.
Impact and Intimidation on Language Groups
Language Profiling as a Gatekeeping Tool: Vigilante movements, such as the March and March group, have historically used language tests (such as identifying local slang or specific linguistic nuances) to identify and corner suspected "foreigners".
Targeting of Local Minorities: Because South Africa shares cross-border languages (like Tsonga, Venda, Sotho, and Tswana) with neighbouring countries, domestic minority language groups face acute profiling, harassment, and questioning regarding their citizenship status.
The June 30 Deadline: Activist networks have issued an arbitrary deadline of 30 June 2026 for all undocumented individuals to leave the country. This ultimatum has significantly heightened the climate of fear, forcing local businesses to shut down and inducing voluntary repatriations by foreign nationals.
Human Rights and Community Response
Civil Society Alarms: Independent monitoring bodies and organizations like Human Rights Watch (HRW) have sharply condemned the lack of decisive police intervention, warning that masking vigilantism as "community protection" actively legitimizes violence.
State Action: While the government's Inter-Ministerial Committee on Migration has pledged to crack down on lawlessness, human rights groups argue that the official response remains inadequate to prevent widespread intimidation.
@sandileswana Makes one wonder, throughout history when those planting seeds of genocide are exposed the denials come from even those marked for persecution-Rwanda Genocide/the Holocaust/Ndebele Genocide-the signs were there but ownership was initially denied until it was too late.