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Jun 21, 2026
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South Africa's Immigration Crackdown: A Divided Johannesburg

AI Summary
South Africa's immigration crackdown is dividing Johannesburg's inner city, with employers like Junaid Mohammed struggling to hire locals due to high minimum wages and labour protections, while the government tightens enforcement and vigilante groups carry out 'citizen raids' on businesses accused of hiring foreign nationals.

The Immigration Squeeze

Johannesburg, South Africa – In the narrow lanes of Fordsburg in central Johannesburg, Junaid Mohammed* stands behind the counter of a family shop that has been in his family for decades. His father started it as a general dealer. Today, it survives on cheap Chinese imports and shrinking margins.

Junaid, who asks us to use a pseudonym, does not call it a decline. He calls it survival.

But the bigger change is not what he sells. It is who he employs.

Junaid only employs foreign nationals as store assistants and packers. “It was not a deliberate choice,” he says.

It began with cost. Then habit. Then necessity.

“It became expensive to hire locals,” he says.

South Africa’s minimum wage is about $1.87 per hour, roughly $324 per month, plus statutory contributions and strong labour protections.

Junaid says he cannot carry it.

He pays about $12 a day, below the legal minimum, and hires workers only when business allows.

Pressure beyond the Shop

Outside, pressure is rising.

Across South Africa, vigilante groups such as Operation Dudula and the March and March movement have carried out “citizen raids” on businesses accused of hiring foreign nationals. Some have turned violent.

At the same time, the state is tightening enforcement. President Cyril Ramaphosa has condemned vigilante action and promised to hire 10,000 labour inspectors.

For employers like Junaid, the squeeze now comes from both directions.

A violation of labour law could shut him down.

“I don’t know what I am going to do,” he says.

Labour, Law, and Blame

Anti-immigrant sentiment has hardened. Some groups blame undocumented migrants for unemployment and demand their removal.

The government insists enforcement is about legality, not politics.

But its language is blunt.

“The reason why you see a number of companies employing illegal foreign immigrants is because, for them, it’s cheap labour. It’s about exploitation. It’s about making profit,” South Africa’s Deputy Minister of Labour Jomo Sibiya, told Al Jazeera.

The Inner-City Economy

But inside Johannesburg’s inner city, the picture is more layered.

Loren Landau, a migration scholar at the University of Oxford, says undocumented labour is concentrated in the sectors hardest to regulate.

“On the job front … there are huge advantages to hiring foreigners. You can always threaten them with deportation, or non-payment.”

A City Being Reshaped

But migrants are also embedded in Johannesburg’s informal economy – running shops, moving goods, sustaining trade in struggling inner-city blocks.

Urban planner Tanya Zack says that role is often overlooked.

“A lot of money generated by migrants selling fast fashion … is important to an inner city that’s failing. If we could invest in infrastructure and policing to make it safer, you could capture more in the South African economy,” she says.

Enforcement without Resolution

On the ground, enforcement is visible: raids, arrests, removals. Undocumented nationals from several African countries are being repatriated from South Africa, emboldening anti-immigrant groups.

Yet nothing feels settled.

Landau says the moment is becoming self-reinforcing.

“The day after Ramaphosa’s speech … Operation Dudula was back on the street. They have no reason to stop,” he said.