President Cyril Ramaphosa urged South Africans not to blame migrants for the country's problems, after a recent wave of anti-immigrant unrest and violence.
President Cyril Ramaphosa on Tuesday urged South Africans not to blame migrants for the country's problems, after a recent wave of anti-immigrant unrest and violence.
One of Africa's largest economies, South Africa has long attracted migrant workers from across the continent, both legally and illegally.
But in recent weeks, mobs of South Africans carrying sticks, whips and shields have marched through parts of the country ordering foreigners with no residency papers to leave by June 30.
"There are some who blame the problems of the current government, of unemployment and crime and poor service delivery, on foreign nationals," Ramaphosa said in a speech marking Youth Day, commemorating the 1976 Soweto uprising that helped bring down apartheid.







