Minister of International Relations and Cooperation Ronald Lamola has suggested that ongoing anti immigrant protests in South Africa may be coordinated by foreign powers displeased with the country’s decision to bring a case against Israel before the International Court of Justice. While he did not name specific countries, the claim appears to refer to Israel and the United States.
The article argues that such a serious allegation requires credible and verifiable evidence. In its absence, the claim risks being seen as a political narrative rather than a substantiated assessment. It also reinforces a familiar tendency to portray the ANC led government as a victim of external interference, diverting attention from legitimate domestic grievances.
The author draws parallels to other countries, noting that Russian President Vladimir Putin accused Hillary Clinton of encouraging protests in 2011, and that Iranian authorities have similarly blamed the US and Israel for nationwide protests rather than addressing economic decline and political repression.
The article suggests that by implying foreign powers are behind the protests, Lamola appears to be diverting attention from substantive concerns raised by ordinary South Africans about governance, service delivery, unemployment, crime, border management and social cohesion. It notes that in the past, ANC leaders such as Gwede Mantashe dismissed service delivery protests as the work of a third force.
The author concludes that blaming foreign actors for domestic challenges allows politicians to evade accountability and that accountability, openness and transparency are fundamental pillars of any functioning democracy.
