South Africa Trippin'? Gov't Claims Xenophobia Vids Fake While Brothers and Sisters Get Harassed
Nah, frfr, ain't nobody buyin' that BS—the streets talkin', and they sayin' South Africa ain't lookin' out for our people.

Aight, so peep this. South Africa's government tryna play us, sayin' all them vids of folks gettin' harassed for bein' foreign are straight-up fake news. Like we ain't got eyes and ears, know what I'm sayin'? They claimin' it's all a conspiracy to make 'em look bad. Bruh, they doin' a good job of that themselves, fa real.
Ghana hit up the African Union, Nigeria offerin' to fly they people back home, and all these other countries—Kenya, Malawi, Lesotho, Zimbabwe—tellin' they citizens to watch they backs. It's a whole mess, and South Africa actin' like they don't see nothin'.
They got these 'vigilante groups' rollin' around, checkin' folks' papers and tellin' 'em to go back where they came from. One Ghanaian dude got told to 'fix his country.' Straight up disrespect. And the gov't tryna say this ain't xenophobia? Come on, son.
The Minister in the Presidency, Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, bless her heart, is out here sayin' these 'fake vids' are tryna 'undermine the good reputation of South Africa.' Reputation? What reputation? The one where they treatin' folks from other African countries like second-class citizens? I ain't hearin' it.
Meanwhile, regular South Africans out here protestin' illegal immigration, sayin' it's takin' they jobs and housing. I get it, times is hard, but blamin' immigrants ain't the answer. We all strugglin' out here, and we gotta stick together, not tear each other down. But it's easier to make someone the scapegoat.
Xenophobia been a problem in South Africa for years, and it always hits the poorest communities the hardest. Folks fightin' over scraps while the big dogs up top stay fat and happy. It's a damn shame.
Ghana's letter to the AU talkin' 'bout 'African solidarity' and 'brotherhood.' That's nice and all, but what about the brothers and sisters on the ground gettin' messed with? Talk is cheap; we need real action.
President Ramaphosa's people sayin' South Africa is a 'welcoming country.' Welcoming to who? The rich folks and the tourists? 'Cause the folks I know ain't feelin' the love. No Cap.
Ntshavheni straight up sayin' there ain't no xenophobic attacks, just 'general criminality.' Right, so that makes it okay? Nah, it don't. Whether it's xenophobia or just plain ol' crime, folks gettin' hurt, and the government need to step up and do somethin' about it.
Bottom line: South Africa need to get they act together and start treatin' all people with respect, no matter where they from. Stop playin' games and start lookin' out for the community, for real. This ain't just about 'reputation'; it's about human lives. Keep it 100.

