Stranded: Crackdown on illegal immigrants leaves children without parents in our schools
<p> Gauteng MEC for Sports, Arts and Culture, Lebogang Maile has revealed that the wave of illegal immigration marches has left many learners stranded and without parents as parents flee South Africa in numbers.</p>
<p>Image: Oupa Mokoena / Independent Newspapers</p>
<p>South Africa's intensifying crackdown on illegal immigration is leaving a troubling human cost in its wake - undocumented children stranded in Gauteng schools after their parents fled the country to escape deportation.</p>
<p>The alarming reality was revealed by Gauteng MEC for Sports, Arts and Culture Lebogang Maile during the department's budget vote in the provincial legislature yesterday, even as the national government warned it was preparing for potential unrest on the scale of the July 2021 riots ahead of a threatened June 30 shutdown.</p>
<p>Acting police minister Firoz Cachalia disclosed that R600-million, typically allocated for police stations and community policing, would be redirected to secure the country against the threatened shutdown by anti-illegal immigration movement March and March, which has warned it will bring South Africa to a standstill if undocumented foreign nationals have not left by its deadline.</p>
<p>Defence Minister Angie Motshekga said the army would be ready to support police if needed.</p>
<p>Gauteng Premier <a href="https://iol.co.za/tags/lesufi/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Panyaza Lesufi</a> says the province supports the right to peaceful protest but warns that any violence or criminality linked to the planned 30 June 2026 shutdown over illegal immigration will be met with firm action.</p>
<p>Lesufi said Gauteng, which is home to many foreign nationals, is preparing for potential disruptions linked to the planned shutdown and has implemented measures to ensure public safety and stability.</p>







