The ongoing debate over South Africa’s domestic labor regulations and immigration enforcement has intensified following a direct warning from a prominent civic leader. Princy Mthombeni, the chairperson of South Africans for Constitutional Reform (SACR), stated that a vast number of undocumented migrants currently living in the country lack valid work permits. According to Mthombeni, this reality exposes systemic vulnerabilities in how the state regulates employment and manages its borders.
Her remarks follow an extraordinary emergency meeting at the Union Buildings in Pretoria. Ministers from the Justice, Crime Prevention and Security cluster convened with leaders of the March and March movement to address a disruptive wave of anti-illegal immigration protests. These demonstrations, which included localized border blockades and unauthorized compliance checks in townships, have recently brought both formal and informal retail networks in major cities to a standstill.
Mthombeni argued that the immigration impasse is deeply connected to South Africa’s broader unemployment crisis. She pointed out that the widespread hiring of undocumented non-nationals in sectors like hospitality, agriculture, and informal retail reflects a severe collapse in labor law enforcement. This dynamic, she explained, undercuts local job seekers and sparks deep community resentment. Mthombeni blamed the Department of Labour’s historically weak workplace inspection record for creating a regulatory vacuum. She warned that this lack of oversight has fueled radical grassroots movements, some of which are now threatening a total national shutdown on June 30, 2026.
The situation has exposed a widening ideological divide within the Government of National Unity regarding immigration policy. While legal watchdogs caution that aggressive, blanket clampdowns might simply drive vulnerable economic refugees further into hiding, conservative factions argue that prioritizing South African workers is a constitutional necessity. With specialized Public Order Policing units currently deployed to protect commercial hubs, the SACR has urged the government to fast-track amendments to the Immigration Act. Mthombeni concluded that by introducing biometric verification and imposing severe fines on business owners who violate hiring laws, the state can restore public trust and prevent citizens from taking the law into their own hands.
