Xenophobia: African nations threaten retaliatory action against South Africa

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South Africa finds itself under growing diplomatic strain as an increasing number of African nations threaten countermeasures in response to fresh xenophobic attacks directed at foreign nationals, with Nigerians among the hardest hit.

Although no country has formally declared a complete border shutdown, calls for trade suspensions, blockades, and intensified border checks are gaining momentum across the continent. Foreign policy analysts describe the situation as the most significant diplomatic crisis the region has seen since the fall of apartheid.

The current unrest, which flared between April 27 and 29, 2026, saw residents in Pretoria, Johannesburg, and several other cities take to the streets in protest against undocumented immigration. Nigerians and other African nationals bore much of the resulting hostility.

The violence has reignited familiar narratives accusing migrants of undercutting local wages, crowding out informal traders, and fueling criminal activity such as drug trafficking and fraud — claims that available police data largely fail to support as a widespread or nationally verified pattern.

Repatriation, diplomatic pressure mount

Neighbouring states such as Lesotho, Zimbabwe and Mozambique, that account for the majority of South Africa’s migrant population, are on high alert, with many citizens seeking to return home as tensions escalate.

Meanwhile, Nigeria and Ghana have taken the lead in diplomatic pushback, warning their citizens to exercise caution and demanding urgent action from Pretoria.

On Monday, the Federal Government officially summoned South Africa’s High Commissioner to formally convey Abuja’s displeasure and insisted on concrete steps to protect Nigerian lives and property.

The government has also begun arrangements for the voluntary repatriation of its citizens. As of May 3, 130 Nigerians have registered with the Nigerian mission in South Africa for evacuation flights, and officials say the number is likely to increase ahead of another planned demonstration scheduled for May 4-8.

The government has stressed that the immediate priority remained the safety of its nationals, and pledged to pursue all diplomatic avenues to secure their protection.

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