It Is Our Right: Ngizwe Mchunu Says He Has The Power To Check The Immigration Papers of Foreigners
iReport South Africa | 28.05.2026 14:09
In a move that has substantially raised worries of widespread civil unrest, prominent media personality and anti-immigration campaigner Ngizwe Mchunu has said that civilian organisations have the legal right to confront foreign people and examine their identity paperwork. This action has significantly elevated fears of widespread public unrest.
Mchunu’s very controversial statements were made during a major protest in Durban. During the gathering, he gave an explicit instruction directing South African residents to wear the national flag on June 30, 2026. This was done in order to identify themselves and to prevent being caught up in approaching street-level events.
The former broadcaster, who has emerged as a prominent figurehead with Jacinta Ngobese-Zuma in the March and March movement, is using his vast social media reach to impose a severe, unilateral deadline for all illegal foreign nationals to leave the country. This deadline is being enforced by the former broadcaster.
As a result of the movement’s intensive social media effort and unauthorised compliance sweeps, the informal economy across the eThekwini metro has already been rendered inoperable, which has caused widespread concern.
There have been major worries expressed by political experts and independent human rights monitors over Mchunu’s most recent remarks. They have expressly warned that the planned closure on June 30 has an unsettling similarity to the incitement techniques that prompted the tragic riots that occurred in July 2021.
The public has been informed in a harsh manner by legal coalitions that document checks conducted by civilians are absolutely illegal and constitute both criminal harassment and vigilante intimidation.
Ngizwe Mchunu, an activist who is opposed to immigration, is of the opinion that he has the authority to examine immigration documents. He is issuing a warning to the people of South Africa encouraging them to identify themselves as citizens by carrying a flag on June 30. Those who are not citizens of the United States are given until that time to depart the country by his organization. We are not going to back down from our position and insist that illegal immigrants must depart. We are going to free this nation in a very short amount of time. Just very soon. Carry your flag on the 30th of June if you are a genuine South African. our will allow us to determine who is really a part of our community. Mchunu made this declaration in front of a throng that was roaring. “If the government fails to enforce the law, the people will enforce it with their own hands.”
Due to the increasing severity of the ultimatum, the state’s security cluster has responded with a great deal of fear. In order to ensure the safety of important transit corridors and township retail centers, the Minister of Police, Senzo Mchunu, and the National Police Commissioner, Fannie Masemola, have swiftly dispatched specialised Public Order Policing teams.
On the other hand, despite the fact that the Democratic Alliance (DA) in eThekwini has strongly criticised the interruptions as being uncontrolled and very detrimental to the economy of the local area, the state is facing an uphill struggle to defuse the momentum.
Authorities have reaffirmed that only formal, statutory entities such as the Border Management Authority (BMA) hold the constitutional mandate to execute migration control. They have also pledged to arrest any civilian who is conducting illegal document audits. This comes at a time when terrified refugees are already seeking emergency protection outside of regional police stations.
This television news show captures the mounting fear in KwaZulu-Natal as a result of Ngizwe Mchunu’s public remarks. Not only does it analyse the legal limitations of citizenship verification, but it also tracks the state’s security deployments in advance of the deadline on June 30.