Ghana News
‘Leave Now, Not on June 30’: Heartbreaking Video Captures South African Vigilante Group Issuing Ultimatum to Immigrants as Xenophobic Violence Intensifies
The surge in xenophobic violence driven by anti-immigrant vigilante groups that has gripped South Africa since January 2026 seems to be intensifying.
This month, groups like Operation Dudula and March on March have issued ultimatums, looted foreign-owned businesses, and forcibly evicted immigrants from cities including Johannesburg and Durban.
A trending video circulating widely on social media captures the latest confrontation between members of a vigilante group and African immigrants, during which the group issues a chilling ultimatum: leave the country immediately rather than waiting for a purported June 30 deadline.
“We’ve been begging for six months, we’ve been begging you guys to leave South Africa. Why are you still here?” one unidentified group member is heard saying.
‘Don’t Listen to the Police. Just Listen to Us’
In the video, which has sparked international outrage and broken the hearts of many well-meaning Africans who stood by the Rainbow nation during the Apartheid era, a group member confronts immigrants, demanding to know their countries of origin and why they remain in South Africa.
When one individual says he is from Uganda, the group member responds:
“As you were running, you were running to Uganda? That’s our business. The fight is not about you. The fight is about correcting the systems and fixing our country.”
The group member explicitly instructs immigrants to disregard government and law enforcement authorities.
“Don’t listen to the government, don’t listen to the police, don’t listen to anyone. Just listen to us. We are saying this peacefully, please go to your parents,” he says.
He then issues a stark warning regarding the previously reported June 30 deadline:
“30 June is the deadline, but it’s not like you must leave on the 30th of June. Don’t leave on the 30th of June. Leave now, because on the 30th of June I can’t control people of South Africa.”
Vigilante Groups Blame Immigrants for Crime and Unemployment
Operation Dudula and March on March, the groups at the forefront of the current wave of violence, have gained significant followings by blaming immigrants for South Africa’s persistently high crime rates and unemployment.
These vigilante organizations have conducted patrols in immigrant neighborhoods, forced the closure of foreign-owned shops, and physically evicted immigrants from their homes.
The violence has particularly targeted informal traders, many of whom come from other African nations including Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Somalia, Ethiopia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Victims have reported beatings, looting of their businesses, and being forced to flee their homes with little more than the clothes on their backs.
Government Response Criticized as Weak
South African authorities have faced mounting criticism for what many describe as an inadequate response to the violence. Police have made some arrests, but activists argue that law enforcement has been slow to intervene or has stood by while vigilante groups operate with impunity.
President Cyril Ramaphosa has previously condemned xenophobic violence, stating that attacks on foreign nationals go against South Africa’s constitutional values and its history of liberation. However, critics argue that rhetorical condemnations have not translated into effective action to protect vulnerable immigrant communities.
A Pattern of Recurring Violence
South Africa has a long and painful history of xenophobic attacks. Major outbreaks occurred in 2008, 2015, 2019, and 2021, each resulting in deaths, injuries, and the displacement of thousands of foreign nationals. The current wave suggests that underlying tensions and scapegoating of immigrants remain unresolved despite government promises to address the root causes.
Human rights organizations have called for urgent intervention, including increased police presence in immigrant neighborhoods, public education campaigns to counter xenophobic rhetoric, and prosecutions of vigilante leaders who incite violence.
‘Only South Africans Must Cook Food’
The latest video also captures the group’s exclusionary ideology in stark terms. When one immigrant from Uganda explains that he is in South Africa “just cooking food,” the group member responds:
“No, you can’t leave your country to come and cook food here. It’s not like constitutionally you can’t do that. The Constitution doesn’t allow that. Only South Africans must cook food.”
The group member concludes with a final warning:
“Please, go home. Now we’re back on Tuesday. Please.”
International Concern Growing
The African Union and the United Nations have expressed concern over the rising violence, calling on South Africa to protect all residents regardless of their nationality. Several African governments, especially Ghana, have issued travel advisories or summoned South African diplomats to protest the treatment of their citizens.
This is a developing story. Updates will be provided as the situation evolves.
Ghana News
Ghana’s Nationwide Flood Clean-Up Kicks Off with Slow Start
ACCRA, Ghana – July 10, 2026 – A two-day nationwide clean-up exercise across seven flood-ravaged regions began Friday morning sluggishly.
Authorities have been urging residents, businesses, and institutions to ramp up participation as teams work to clear refuse, desilt choked drains, and restore public spaces following recent devastating floods.
The exercise, which commenced at 6:00 am local time, will run until 1:00 pm and resume on Saturday, July 11, during the same hours. While early-morning activity in several metropolitan areas was initially subdued, officials report that momentum is gradually building as local assemblies, waste management contractors, security services, and volunteer groups deploy to designated hotspots.
According to the government’s outlined schedule, the first day focuses on Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs), public and private institutions, educational bodies, and waste management firms.
Saturday’s phase will pivot toward community-led efforts, tapping into residents, traditional authorities, and volunteer networks to drive localized clean-up at the grassroots level.

In a bid to maximize turnout, non-essential shops, markets, and commercial establishments within the seven affected regions have been ordered to shut their doors from 6:00 am to 1:00 pm on both days, with exemptions granted only to essential and emergency service providers.
The Ministry has called on transport operators, religious groups, and corporate entities to actively back the initiative, framing it as a critical step toward restoring safe, hygienic communities after the flooding crisis.
Greater Accra, the epicenter of the recent deluge, hosts the bulk of the operation, with authorities identifying 104 flood-prone and affected locations across 17 assemblies. Key areas include, Ga South (Tetegu, STC, Mallam East, New Weija), Ga Central (Awoshie, Kolegu, Israel, A-Land), Ga North (Pokuase Footbridge, Ofankor Barrier), and Ga East (Dome Market, Abokobi Drain). In the capital’s core, heavy machinery and manual crews are converging on major drainage arteries such as Alajo, Kokomlemle, Pig Farm, Mamobi, Nima Highway, the Kanda stretch to Kawukudi, and the 37 Hospital corridor. Coastal communities like Teshie-Nungua, Prampram, Sege, and Tema West’s industrial and residential zones are also actively participating.
Despite the tepid start, authorities remain optimistic that participation will surge as the morning progresses, setting the stage for an even more robust community-driven effort on Saturday.
The exercise represents the government’s most visible response to the recent flooding emergency, mobilizing public administration and local governance structures to tackle the immediate environmental and health hazards facing affected populations.
Ghana News
Top 10 Newspaper Front Page Headlines in Ghana Today: Friday, July 10, 2026
Top 10 news stories on Ghanaian newspaper front pages dated Friday, July 10, 2026.
1. GHC350m Contingency Fund Release Controversy
- Appears in: The New Publisher, The Ghanaian Publisher, The Custodian, The Chronicle
- Summary: The Attorney General is under fire for allegedly instructing the Bank of Ghana to release GHC 350 million from the frozen Contingency Fund for flood relief, despite a court order blocking it. The Minority in Parliament is demanding a probe and blasting the AG’s “lawless” approach.
2. Abu Trica Extradited to US Over $8m Romance Scam
- Appears in: Daily Guide, Ghanaian Times, The New Publisher
- Summary: Socialite Abu Trica has been extradited to the United States to face charges related to an alleged $8 million romance fraud scheme. The extradition happened despite a lack of a court order reversing the decision on the Black Volta project (mentioned in related coverage).
3. GJA Gives NDC Chairman Seven Days to Apologise Over Obaatanpa Radio Attack
- Appears in: Supreme, Daily Guide
- Summary: The Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) has given the Central Regional Chairman of the NDC a seven-day ultimatum to apologise for an attack on Obaatanpa Radio. The incident has sparked significant backlash.
4. Gomoa East NPP Rallies Behind Francis Mensah for Chairman
- Appears in: Supreme, The Ghanaian Publisher, The Custodian, The Metro Lens
- Summary: The Gomoa East Constituency of the NPP is rallying to elect Francis Mensah as the next Constituency Chairman. This grassroots movement is a major story across multiple papers.
5. Azumah Resources Denies Reversal of Black Volta Project Ownership
- Appears in: News Centa, The Chronicle, Daily Guide
- Summary: Azumah Resources Ghana Ltd has refuted false media reports claiming that an ICC ruling reversed the acquisition of the Black Volta project. They insist they still own the project, calling the reports “a big lie.”
6. Amankwaa Donates GHC 100,000 Seed Fund to Ayawaso West NPP
- Appears in: Supreme, News Centa
- Summary: Samuel Owusu Amankwaa has donated GHC 100,000 as a seed fund to the Ayawaso West Wuogon NPP constituency ahead of the election of new executives.
7. North Dayi Boils Over: “Joycelyn Must Go” Protests
- Appears in: Supreme
- Summary: Residents of North Dayi are up in arms, with protests erupting under the banner “Joycelyn Must Go.” The protesters are chanting “Enough is Enough” over local grievances.
8. NHIA Cracks Down on Illegal Charges in Eastern Region
- Appears in: The Metro Lens
- Summary: The National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) has launched a crackdown on illegal charges being imposed on patients in the Eastern Region. The NHIA Boss is leading the effort.
9. $208m Methamphetamine Scandal
- Appears in: The Ghanaian Publisher, The Custodian
- Summary: An MP is demanding the prosecution of officials involved in a $208 million methamphetamine scandal. There are also calls for the government to name officials implicated, with accusations of a cover-up.
10. National Sanitation Exercise and Flood Recovery Clean-Up
- Appears in: Supreme, The Punch, The New Publisher, News Centa
- Summary: A nationwide clean-up exercise is underway to aid flood recovery, with various political figures and MCEs rallying residents to participate. The exercise is scheduled for the weekend, with a focus on recovery from recent floods.
Ghana News
President Mahama Backs Tighter Checks on His Own Office in Upcoming Constitution Vote
President John Dramani Mahama has announced that Ghana’s Cabinet will meet on Friday, July 10, 2026, to finalise the government’s position paper on constitutional reform.
The process is expected to recommend significant curbs on executive power, including tighter checks on the presidency itself.
The reforms stem from a year-long nationwide consultation conducted by the eight-member Constitutional Review Committee (CRC), chaired by Professor Henry Kwasi Prempeh, which submitted its final report to the President in December 2025.
The committee’s report, titled “Transforming Ghana: From Electoral Democracy to Developmental Democracy,” addressed perennial governance challenges and recommended measures to strengthen institutional checks and balances.
Speaking at the Jubilee House on Tuesday during a farewell ceremony for Switzerland’s outgoing Ambassador to Ghana, Simone Giger, President Mahama confirmed that significant progress had been made.
“I am pleased to inform you that we have made significant progress. Cabinet is scheduled to meet on Friday to finalise the Government’s Position Paper on the Constitutional Review,” President Mahama said.
He explained that once Cabinet concludes its work, the Legal Counsel and the Attorney-General would take one or two weeks to consolidate the document. It would then be handed over, together with the CRC’s report, to the Constitutional Review Implementation Committee to begin implementation.
President Mahama described the 1992 Constitution as one of the finest Ghana has ever had, noting that it had provided the foundation for the Fourth Republic — the longest-serving republic in the country’s history.
“We therefore believe that any amendments to the Constitution should strengthen it further and ensure that it remains a living document capable of serving Ghana effectively for the next three decades and beyond,” he said.
The Constitutional Review Committee’s recommendations are understood to include proposals to separate the Executive from the Legislature — preventing Members of Parliament from being appointed as ministers — as well as measures to decentralise power and enhance accountability.
The committee also recommended amendments to Chapter 25 of the Constitution to introduce a third route for amending entrenched provisions.
Ambassador Giger, who has supported the constitutional reform process throughout her four-year tenure in Ghana, welcomed the progress.
“We have always rooted for Ghana because we genuinely believe that constitutional reform is central to the country’s future development,” she said, adding, “If Ghana succeeds in adopting a truly people’s constitution, one that decentralises power, strengthens checks and balances on the Executive, and incorporates the many important reforms currently under consideration, I believe the future of this country will be exceptionally bright.”
President Mahama also used the occasion to acknowledge Switzerland’s support for Ghana’s small and medium enterprises, particularly in agro-processing and agribusiness, an area he described as one of the missing links in the country’s agricultural value chain.
The constitutional review process, initiated in 2025, follows two previous attempts that failed to build sufficient consensus for significant change.
The government has pledged to establish the Constitutional Review Implementation Committee to oversee the roll-out of the reforms.
Once the position paper is finalised and consolidated, it will be made public and subjected to the necessary constitutional and parliamentary scrutiny.
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