Thursday, March 26, 2026 - South African police fired rubber bullets and teargas on Wednesday to disperse hundreds of protesters demanding tougher action against foreigners in the coastal city of Durban.
The protesters, including members of political parties and
the xenophobic vigilante group Operation Dudula, marched through streets waving
placards and chanting against undocumented immigrants.
Members
of Operation Dududla join members of March and March Movement during a national
campaign protest in Durban on March 25, 2026. (Photo by RAJESH JANTILAL / AFP)
They specifically cited foreigners from Nigeria, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Mexico, and other countries, blaming them for taking jobs and
contributing to crime.
The leader of the ActionSA party, Herman Mashaba, said at
the protest, “People can call us names but we cannot allow a situation where
our country is being destroyed before our very own eyes.
“We are seeing our government allowing our country to be
flooded by groups from all over the world as far as Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Nigeria, Mexico, all over the world. So we are saying to our government this is
unacceptable.”
Members
of March and March Movement together with members from the Inkhata Freedom
Party (IFP), ActionSA and Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) party sing and chant slogans
during a national campaign protest in Durban on March 25, 2026. (Photo by
RAJESH JANTILAL / AFP)
Some shop owners shut their businesses before the march,
fearing looting and violence, while a small group of protesters reportedly
harassed bystanders and looted shops, prompting a police response.
81‑year‑old Thembi Dlamini from Clermont, west of Durban,
speaking at the protest, said, “I have seen my country going down because
officials take bribes to give documents illegally, police allow drug trade
because they are paid.
“Jobs are being taken away by our brothers from other parts
of Africa who are here illegally. Where will our children get jobs?”
The protest reflects rising tensions in South Africa over
unemployment and competition for jobs, with nearly 32 per cent of the
population currently unemployed.
According to the statistics agency, around three million
foreigners, about 5.1 per cent of the population, live in the country.

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