More than 900 arrested during South Africa’s antimigrant protests
South African police arrested over 900 people during nationwide anti-migrant protests organized by civil society groups. The demonstrations, held on Tuesday, were called to mark an unofficial deadline for undocumented migrants to leave the country.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedSouth African police arrested over 900 people during nationwide anti-migrant protests organized by civil society groups. The demonstrations, held on Tuesday, were called to mark an unofficial deadline for undocumented migrants to leave the country. While most of the 120 marches were peaceful, 12 saw police intervention, resulting in arrests for public violence, robbery, and immigration violations. The Western Cape and Eastern Cape recorded the highest numbers of arrests. President Cyril Ramaphosa acknowledged demonstrators' concerns about illegal immigration and public service pressure but condemned vigilantism. Localized violence occurred, including one death from a shooting during looting of foreign-owned shops in Johannesburg's Alexandra township, and two injuries in Hillbrow.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe Western Cape had the highest number of arrests with 215, followed by the Eastern Cape with 208.
President Cyril Ramaphosa acknowledged concerns about illegal immigration and border management but condemned vigilantism.
One person was shot dead during looting of foreign-owned shops in Johannesburg's Alexandra township.
Protests were organized by a coalition of over 20 civil society groups, including the March and March movement.
More than 900 people were arrested during nationwide anti-migrant protests in South Africa.