March and March's June 30 Deadline | What Actually Happened? | InQuestion
March and March's anticipated 30 June mobilisation has come and gone. The country did not shut down, but thousands of South Africans took to the streets in Johannesburg, Durban, Pretoria, Tembisa, Pietermaritzburg, Germiston, Cape Town and other cities demanding stronger immigration enforcement, border security and action against undocumented migrants. In this episode of InQuestion, we examine what happened during the March and March demonstrations, how thousands of people joined the movement, and whether the protests achieved their objectives. We also explore the incidents of violence, looting and clashes with police that accompanied an otherwise largely peaceful national mobilisation. Did the 30 June deadline prove that public frustration over illegal immigration has reached a tipping point? Or does it expose deeper failures in South Africa's immigration system, law enforcement capacity and political leadership? This video explains: • What happened during the March and March protests on 30 June • Immigration, border control and undocumented migrant concerns • The protests in Johannesburg, Durban, Cape Town, Pretoria and beyond • Reports of violence, looting and clashes with police • The role of SAPS, law enforcement and security operations • The departure of thousands of undocumented foreign nationals • The difference between lawful protest and vigilantism • Claims about crime, syndicates and undocumented migration • Government's response to the growing anti-illegal immigration movement • What happens next as March and March plans further mobilisation The debate over illegal immigration, unemployment, crime, border security and public safety has become one of the most divisive issues in South African politics. While many citizens argue that government has failed to enforce immigration laws, others warn that public frustration can quickly spill over into xenophobia, vigilantism and attacks on innocent people. As the March and March movement continues to grow, South Africa faces difficult questions about migration policy, law enforcement, social cohesion and the balance between public protest and the rule of law. Did the 30 June mobilisation change anything? And if thousands of migrants have left, are the criminal syndicates and kingpins that protesters blame for many of South Africa's problems actually being removed, or are they still operating in the shadows? #MarchAndMarch #IllegalImmigration #UndocumentedMigrants #Immigration #BorderControl #Johannesburg #Durban #CapeTown #Pretoria #SAPS #Police #Crime #Migration #Politics #June30 #Protests #LawEnforcement #PublicSafety #Xenophobia #Vigilantism #GovernmentFailure #BorderSecurity #CurrentAffairs #InQuestion #PoliticalAnalysis #MigrationPolicy #NationalSecurity

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