Protesters marching in Boksburg against immigration policies.
Protesters marching in Boksburg against immigration policies.
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Anti-foreigner marchers reject Ramaphosa’s immigration address in East Rand

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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.

On Monday morning, members of March and March and the All Truck Drivers Forum and Allied South Africa walked along Benoni’s Main Reef Road and visited businesses. They carried golf clubs, wooden sticks and sjamboks while under police escort. The protest remained peaceful with no reported violence. Organisers told business owners to terminate employment of all foreign nationals, including those with valid documents, by 30 June 2026. Bongani Mthethwa of ATDF-ASA said the group was informing foreign nationals to leave rather than requesting their departure. Demonstrators stated they wanted all foreign nationals to leave South Africa, not only those without legal status. The marches followed Ramaphosa’s Sunday address in which he announced increased workplace inspections and warned against vigilantism. Marchers dismissed the speech. Theo Khosa of March and March said Ramaphosa had failed South Africans. Political parties responded differently. ActionSA leader Herman Mashaba called the address weak, while DA leader Geordin Hill-Lewis welcomed the focus on enforcement and condemned incitement of violence.

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Protesters from March and March group demonstrate against illegal immigration in Johannesburg, handing memorandum to Gauteng Premier.
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March and March protests expand to Gauteng cities

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The anti-foreigner group March and March held demonstrations in Tshwane and Johannesburg on Tuesday and Wednesday, demanding action against illegal immigrants ahead of local government elections. Leader Jacinta Ngobese-Zuma called for stricter immigration controls, while ActionSA's Herman Mashaba voiced support. Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi received a memorandum and was given seven days to respond.

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.

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

Ghana has requested that the African Union discuss xenophobic attacks in South Africa at its mid-year summit in Egypt. South African International Relations Minister Ronald Lamola said the move gives Pretoria a chance to highlight migration challenges.

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African ambassadors to South Africa have clarified that they are postponing their own Africa Day event for security reasons and are not boycotting the main government celebration.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has sought advice from Kenyan President William Ruto on addressing migration challenges. The leaders met in Tshwane on Thursday as part of a three-day state visit that produced six bilateral agreements.

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South Africa has noted Ghana's call for an African Union debate on alleged xenophobic attacks at the upcoming mid-year summit in Cairo, while condemning recent incidents and stressing diplomatic engagement.

 

 

 

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