An image showing a South African township street with closed
small shops owned by African migrants, police presence in the background, and
community members walking past with tense expressions.
More than thirty years after the collapse of Apartheid,
South Africa continues to wrestle with a painful legacy that still shapes its
social and political landscape. One of the most disturbing consequences is the
recurring wave of xenophobic hostility directed at fellow Africans, Ghanaians,
Nigerians, Zimbabweans, Mozambicans, Malawians, and others, who migrate in
search of greener pastures or operate small businesses.
The latest incident, reported on April 23, 2026, saw
residents of Mthatha preparing for a demonstration demanding that foreign
nationals close their shops and remain indoors. According to the Ghanaian
community leadership, locals claimed that foreigners were taking their jobs and
competing for scarce opportunities.
Although the police assured the public that
the protest would be peaceful, the fear among foreign nationals is
unmistakable, reflecting a long-standing pattern of intimidation and violence.
This hostility is not random. It is rooted in deep
historical, economic, and psychological wounds, many of which can be traced
back to the Apartheid system. Apartheid was not merely a political structure;
it was a deliberate social engineering project designed to create racial
hierarchy, economic inequality, and a culture of suspicion. It fragmented
communities, restricted movement, and conditioned generations to view outsiders
as threats.
When Apartheid ended, the political system changed, but the
psychological scars remained. South Africans inherited a society built on
competition for survival, a belief that limited resources must be protected,
and a violent culture where conflict was often resolved through force. These
unresolved traumas now manifest as hostility toward African migrants who become
convenient scapegoats for broader national frustrations.
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The reasons behind these attacks are complex and deeply
intertwined with South Africa’s current socio-economic challenges. The country
suffers from one of the highest unemployment rates in the world, with youth
unemployment exceeding 60 percent.
In such an environment, desperation fuels
resentment, and foreigners, especially those who run small shops or informal
businesses, are often blamed for taking opportunities that locals believe
should belong to them.
Many South Africans feel that foreign traders are more
competitive because they work longer hours, offer lower prices, and operate
through strong cooperative networks. This perception, whether accurate or
exaggerated, creates tension in communities where survival is already
difficult.
Political manipulation also plays a significant role. Some
local politicians subtly encourage anti-foreigner sentiments to distract
citizens from government failures such as corruption, unemployment, and poor
service delivery.
Instead of addressing systemic issues, they shift the blame
to migrants, knowing that frustrated citizens are eager for someone to hold
responsible. Weak law enforcement further worsens the situation.
When attackers burn shops, loot businesses, or assault
foreign nationals without facing consequences, it emboldens others and
normalizes violence as a form of expression. Another factor is the widespread
misinformation that circulates in communities. Rumors that foreigners take all
the jobs, dominate the informal sector, or are responsible for rising crime
spread quickly and ignite anger.
These narratives overshadow the reality that many
foreign-owned businesses contribute positively to South Africa’s economy. They
create jobs for locals, introduce new business models, strengthen supply
chains, and increase tax revenue. Their presence also enriches cultural
diversity, fosters social exchange, and strengthens regional trade networks
that benefit South African companies seeking to expand into other African
markets.
The failure of Pan-African education has also weakened
solidarity. Many South Africans are unaware of the sacrifices other African
nations made during the liberation struggle, offering shelter, training,
funding, and diplomatic support to the ANC and other anti-Apartheid movements.
This historical ignorance has created a generation disconnected from the spirit
of African unity that once defined the continent’s fight against oppression.
It is therefore clear that Apartheid has played an indirect
but powerful role in shaping today’s xenophobic attacks. The system created
deep economic inequality, spatial segregation, and a culture of violence that
still lingers. It conditioned communities to distrust outsiders and left behind
a fractured society struggling to rebuild cohesion.
When democracy arrived, the structural foundations of
Apartheid were dismantled, but the psychological and economic consequences
remained. Foreign Africans, who once supported South Africa’s liberation, now
find themselves targeted as the new “outsiders” in a country they helped free.
To address this crisis, African leaders must adopt a diplomatic, coordinated,
and long-term approach.
Diplomatic engagement with South Africa must be consistent,
not reactive. The African Union should establish joint monitoring teams to
identify hotspots and intervene before violence escalates. Schools across the
continent, including South Africa, must integrate Pan-African history into
their curricula to rebuild the sense of unity that once guided Africa’s
liberation movements.
Bilateral economic agreements can help regulate business
permits, protect workers, and reduce informal competition that fuels
resentment. African embassies must also strengthen their support systems by
providing legal assistance, registering citizens, and offering emergency
shelters during crises. At the same time, African governments must address the
root causes that push their citizens to migrate.
Many Africans leave home because their countries fail to
provide opportunities. By creating jobs, reducing corruption, and investing in
development, African leaders can reduce the pressure that drives migration and
vulnerability abroad. South Africa, on its part, must enforce the law firmly
and consistently. Without accountability, xenophobic violence will continue to
resurface.
Xenophobic attacks in South Africa are not isolated
incidents; they are the echoes of a painful past amplified by present-day
frustrations. Yet the solution does not lie in anger or retaliation. It lies in
diplomacy, education, economic cooperation, and strong leadership across the
continent.
Africa must remember that unity is not a slogan, it is a survival strategy.
If African leaders act decisively and collaboratively, the continent can
prevent further bloodshed and rebuild the spirit of Pan-African solidarity that
once inspired the world.