Countries begin repatriating citizens from south africa amid attacks

Nigeria, mozambique, malawi and ghana are evacuating hundreds of their citizens from south africa following recent xenophobic attacks and ahead of a 30 june deadline set by anti-immigrant groups.

Mozambique has already repatriated 545 nationals by bus through the ressano garcia border post after violence in mossel bay on 29 may left five mozambicans dead. The government provided buses and minibuses for the operation and said it is prepared to evacuate up to 1,000 people.

Ghana airlifted 297 citizens on a charter flight from or tambo international airport last week, with plans for another flight. Nigeria will begin screening citizens on thursday for an evacuation of between 2,000 and 4,000 people.

Malawi announced it will assist citizens who request help to leave, with details to follow once logistics are finalised. South african president cyril ramaphosa told parliament that the country must address illegal immigration without resorting to violence or vigilantism.

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Refugees camping outside Home Affairs office during xenophobic protests in Durban with deadline signs.
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Xenophobic groups set June 30 deadline in Durban

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Xenophobic protests in Durban over the past week have left refugees camping outside the Home Affairs office as groups set a June 30 deadline for undocumented foreigners to leave South Africa.

Nearly 300 Ghanaians boarded a government-organised repatriation flight from South Africa on Wednesday as fears of xenophobic violence grew. A second flight is scheduled for Sunday.

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Ghana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has postponed the evacuation of its nationals from South Africa by a few days. The delay stems from legal and logistical requirements. More than 800 Ghanaians had registered to return home.

President Cyril Ramaphosa addressed the nation on Sunday from Pretoria, admitting government failures in managing illegal immigration and outlining new measures to strengthen borders and enforcement.

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President Cyril Ramaphosa has pledged stronger enforcement against illegal migration as anti-foreigner protests spread across South Africa.

Anti-foreigner groups marched through Boksburg, Springs and Benoni on 8 June 2026, rejecting President Cyril Ramaphosa’s recent address on immigration and setting a 30 June deadline for businesses to end employment of foreign nationals.

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Several Afrikaners who say they were approved for U.S. refugee resettlement report that their airline tickets were canceled days before departure, leaving families in limbo and forcing some to repeat time-limited medical screening requirements.

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