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Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Africa Africa & Latin America

South Africa Processes 53,000 Foreign Nationals for Deportation

By · July 14, 2026 · 5 min read

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Africa · Southern

Key Facts

Scale. South Africa processed 53,449 foreign nationals for deportation or repatriation by 11 July 2026.

Composition. Malawians accounted for more than 80% of those processed, followed by Zimbabweans and Mozambicans.

Trend. Deportations rose from 39,672 in 2023/24 to 57,784 in 2025/26, totalling 109,344 over two financial years.

Politics. The crackdown follows weeks of anti-immigration protests and pressure from vigilante-style groups demanding undocumented foreigners leave.

Funding. The government is financing transport, security, and accommodation through state departments, municipalities, and public entities.

South Africa has processed 53,449 foreign nationals for deportation in a sweeping immigration crackdown that tests Pretoria’s regional diplomacy, strains labour markets, and reveals the political weight of anti-migrant sentiment ahead of a critical electoral cycle.

South Africa Moves to Deport 53,000 Foreigners in Immigration Crackdown — South Africa deportations
South Africa Moves to Deport 53,000 Foreigners in Immigration Crackdown (Photo internet reproduction)
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The Numbers Behind the South Africa Deportation Drive

Justice Minister and Inter-Ministerial Committee on Migration chair Mmamoloko Kubayi announced on 11 July 2026 that 53,449 individuals had been processed for removal or government-facilitated repatriation. Malawians constituted more than 80 percent of that total, with Zimbabweans and Mozambicans forming the next largest cohorts.

The figure sits atop a steep upward curve: the Department of Home Affairs recorded 39,672 deportations in 2023/24, 51,560 in 2024/25, and 57,784 in 2025/26. Over the past two financial years, the state has carried out 109,344 deportations, making this the most aggressive enforcement period in at least half a decade.

Ramaphosa’s Balancing Act: Enforcement Meets Economic Reality

President Cyril Ramaphosa has paired the crackdown with a broader migration overhaul that includes dedicated immigration courts, tougher border controls, and anti-corruption measures inside the documentation system. His government has also signalled a more structured labour-migration regime, including quotas for foreign workers in certain sectors and restrictions on business licensing for people without valid status.

The tension is unmistakable: South Africa suffers from roughly 30 percent unemployment, yet its economy still depends on foreign skills and lower-wage labour in agriculture, hospitality, and domestic work. Policymakers are simultaneously discussing ways to attract “designer migrants” and speed up visas for investors and entrepreneurs, a dual-track approach that reveals how migration politics is as much about economic management as it is about sovereignty.

Why the South Africa Deportation Story Is a Money Story

The state is spending public funds on detention, transport, security, and accommodation for deportees, with Kubayi confirming that departments, municipalities, and public entities are financing most of the operation. At the same time, officials are tightening workplace inspections and targeting employers who hire undocumented migrants, shifting enforcement costs into the private sector.

That shift could disrupt labour supply in sectors that rely on lower-wage migrant workers, from farms in Limpopo to restaurants in Johannesburg. For investors watching South Africa, the crackdown introduces a new variable: the cost of compliance, the risk of labour shortages, and the political premium on any business model that depends on cross-border workforce mobility.

Regional Fallout and the Southern African Labour Corridor

South Africa functions as the region’s economic pole, drawing workers from poorer neighbouring states and exporting policy pressure back into those countries. Malawi, whose citizens dominate the deportation figures, faces the prospect of absorbing thousands of returning nationals with limited employment opportunities at home, straining remittance flows and household incomes.

Zimbabwe and Mozambique, already navigating fragile economic recoveries, will also feel the diplomatic and economic reverberations. Pretoria insists it is cooperating with African states and following legal process, but large-scale expulsions inevitably test bilateral relationships and regional institutions like the Southern African Development Community.

The BRICS and South-South Lens on Migration Enforcement

For readers tracking the wider scramble for influence across the African continent, the deportation drive is a sovereignty play that Pretoria can present to BRICS partners and global investors as evidence of a capable, rule-based state. The government’s emphasis on repatriation, legal process, and inter-state cooperation is also a response to criticism that South Africa scapegoats migrants rather than fixing deeper economic failures.

This story fits squarely inside the dynamics covered by Africa: The New Scramble, where migration governance, labour mobility, and state capacity are emerging as key battlegrounds in the contest for African stability and influence. A South Africa that can manage its borders credibly strengthens its hand in regional diplomacy, while a South Africa that alienates neighbours through mass expulsions risks ceding soft-power ground to external players eager to fill the gap.

What Latin American Readers Should Watch

The South Africa deportation surge echoes migration crackdowns familiar to Latin American audiences, from Colombia’s management of Venezuelan inflows to Chile’s tightening of its northern border. In each case, the political rewards of projecting control collide with the economic reality that migrants fill labour gaps, pay rent, and sustain informal economies that governments struggle to regulate.

For Brazil and other BRICS members, South Africa’s approach offers a live case study in how a major emerging economy navigates the tension between domestic anti-migrant pressure and the need to keep borders functional for trade, investment, and regional leadership. The outcome will shape debates inside the bloc about labour mobility, documentation standards, and the political sustainability of open-border rhetoric.

Connected Coverage

Africa: The New Scramble

Frequently Asked Questions

How many foreign nationals has South Africa processed for deportation in 2026?

By 11 July 2026, South Africa had processed 53,449 foreign nationals for deportation or government-facilitated repatriation, according to Justice Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi. Malawians made up more than 80 percent of that total, with Zimbabweans and Mozambicans forming the next largest groups.

What is driving South Africa’s immigration crackdown?

The crackdown follows weeks of anti-immigration protests and pressure from vigilante-style groups demanding that undocumented foreigners leave the country. President Ramaphosa has responded with tougher enforcement, new immigration courts, border controls, and anti-corruption measures, while also trying to maintain labour-market functionality and regional diplomatic relationships.

How does the deportation policy affect South Africa’s economy and regional standing?

The policy strains labour supply in sectors reliant on migrant workers while shifting enforcement costs onto employers through workplace inspections. Regionally, mass expulsions test bilateral ties with Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique, and challenge South Africa’s credibility as a rule-based regional leader within institutions like the Southern African Development Community and BRICS.

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