have started repatriating nationals over safety concernsImage: Esa Alexander/REUTERS
Skip next section What you need to know
What you need to know
- Nationwide marches planned in protest of illegal migration
- South Africa on edge after weeks of sometimes violent xenophobic unrest targeting mostly African migrants
- President Cyril Ramaphosa says ‘security forces are ready’ to respond to potential unrest
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Thousands of African migrants have already left or been repatriated from South Africa
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After anti-migrant groups set Tuesday as the deadline for undocumented migrants to leave South Africa , the country is bracing for possible violence. Follow DW’s coverage here:
Skip next section WATCH: Fear and uncertainty drive migrants to leave South Africa06/30/2026June 30, 2026
WATCH: Fear and uncertainty drive migrants to leave South Africa
DW speaks with those people caught up in the anti-migrant rhetoric had been building across South Africa.
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https://p.dw.com/p/5GGSHSkip next section Why some South Africans have turned on African migrants06/30/2026June 30, 2026
Why some South Africans have turned on African migrants
Protesters in South Africa are demanding undocumented foreigners leave by Tuesday, amid fears that planned anti-immigrant rallies could turn violent.
Citizen-led groups have backed the unofficial deadline after weeks of unrest, including attacks on migrant-owned businesses.
South Africa, one of Africa’s largest economies and a nation of some 65.5 million people, has long attracted migrants seeking work. Estimates put foreign-born residentsat between 2.4 to 3.1 million .
But unemployment in South Africa remains among the highest in the world, with about a third of people out of work and deep inequality fueling public anger.
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Some activists blame migrants for crime and pressure on public services, though rights groups warn such claims risk inflaming tensions.
A Human Sciences Research Council poll conducted last year showed South Africans were more hostile towards immigrants than ever, with only one in six adults saying they would welcome all foreigners and 42% saying they would welcome none, up from a third in 2021.
https://p.dw.com/p/5GGiPSkip next section Welcome to our coverage06/30/2026June 30, 2026
Welcome to our coverage
Today marks a unilaterally imposed deadline by anti-immigration groups for all undocumented immigrants to leave South Africa.
Marches are planned in major cities across the country, with the main demonstration set to take place in Durban, in KwaZulu-Natal province.
March and March, the main organization behind the protests, said it is not calling for violence.
But tensions are high. Three people, including one Malawian and two Mozambican nationals, were killed in the lead-up to today’s “deadline” during recent anti-immigration protests.
There have also been reports of migrant parents and children being intimidated at schools by self-styled vigilantes. Some migrants have even been blocked from accessing hospitals.
The South African government has condemned the violent incidents and distanced itself from the deadline imposed by anti-immigration groups, However, it has also faced criticism from other African states and civil society groups for failing to stop the violence.
Several countries, including Nigeria, Ghana and Malawi, have helped repatriate citizens who say they no longer feel safe in South Africa.
DW will cover today’s developments with a team that includes correspondents in South Africa and Zimbabwe and elsewhere on the continent.
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