An image showing jubilant African football fans celebrating Mexico’s 2–0 victory over South Africa, with subtle Mexican flags symbolizing protest against xenophobia.
African nations stood firmly with South Africa during the dark years of apartheid, offering political, moral, and diplomatic support to help dismantle an oppressive regime. That history of solidarity has long been a symbol of continental unity.
Yet today, many Africans feel that spirit has been betrayed as xenophobic violence and anti‑migrant rhetoric continue to rise within South Africa, targeting fellow Africans from countries such as Nigeria, Ghana, Mozambique, Malawi, and others.
This tension erupted dramatically on the global stage during the 2026 FIFA World Cup opening match, where Mexico defeated South Africa 2–0. Instead of the usual pan‑African support for Bafana Bafana, social media across the continent lit up with celebrations for Mexico.
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Memes featuring sombreros, mariachi bands, tacos, and Mexican flags flooded platforms like X, Facebook, and TikTok, symbolically expressing frustration with South Africa’s treatment of African migrants. For many Africans, Mexico’s victory felt like poetic justice, a symbolic “sweet revenge” for victims of xenophobia.
Online users openly linked their support for Mexico to ongoing anti‑immigrant threats in South Africa, including calls by activist groups demanding undocumented migrants leave the country by June 30. Several African governments have even begun evacuating their citizens due to fears of violence.
The backlash was not merely football banter. It reflected deep emotional wounds. Africans who once saw South Africa as a beacon of liberation now view the country’s internal tensions as a betrayal of shared history.
Comments across social media questioned why the continent should rally behind a nation accused of mistreating its African brothers and sisters. Some users joked that South Africa should “go home early to protect their jobs,” mocking the unfounded claim that migrants are responsible for the country’s unemployment crisis.
Still, not all Africans joined the boycott‑style celebration. Some fans in East and Central Africa, as well as parts of the diaspora, continued to support South Africa, arguing that football should remain a unifying force. In South Sudan, where ties to South Africa’s anti‑apartheid struggle remain strong, many fans proudly backed Bafana Bafana.
Yet the broader continental mood was unmistakable: Mexico’s win became a symbolic outlet for long‑simmering frustrations. The match exposed a painful truth, that the unity once forged in the fires of anti‑apartheid resistance is now strained by modern‑day xenophobia.
According to many Africans, the defeat was more than a sporting loss for South Africa; it was a moment of emotional vindication for those who feel marginalized, attacked, or unwelcome in a country their nations once helped liberate.


