Business Day

Gauteng to be a ‘no-go zone’ for illegal migrants, vows PA deputy

- Luyolo Mkentane mkentanel@businessli­ve.co.za

City of Johannesbu­rg political transport head Kenny Kunene has vowed to make Gauteng a “no-go zone” for illegal immigrants as he joins a long list of candidates positionin­g themselves to lead SA’s commercial and financial hub after the 2024 general election.

Kunene is deputy president of the Patriotic Alliance (PA) and its Gauteng premier candidate. The PA, led by Gayton McKenzie, made headlines with an antiillega­l-immigratio­n stance that saw it patrol the SA-Zimbabwe border in January, turning away would-be illegal migrants.

Opposition political leaders — including Kunene, DA Gauteng leader Solly Msimanga, Rise Mzansi national chair Vuyiswa Ramokgopa, ActionSA Gauteng chair Funzi Ngobeni and UDM Gauteng premier candidate Mthunzi Mdwaba — say Gauteng is up for grabs as the ANC-run province struggles with issues such as housing, water, electricit­y and healthcare.

The province contributi­ng nearly 40% to GDP also struggles with high unemployme­nt, violent crime, corruption, unstable local government and maladminis­tration. But ANC Gauteng chair and premier Panyaza Lesufi has said only the ANC could save Gauteng.

The ANC lost control of the Johannesbu­rg, Ekurhuleni — which it later reclaimed — and Tshwane metros to DA-led coalitions in the 2021 municipal elections when its national support fell below 50% for the first time since 1994.

ANC support in Gauteng was declining before that: in the 2019 provincial election it got 2.1-million votes, or 50.1%, down from the 53.5% it mustered in 2014.

The PA has been making inroads in the Western Cape, Northern Cape and Gauteng where it won several wards from predominan­tly coloured communitie­s previously viewed as DA stronghold­s.

In by-elections in June 2023 in Johannesbu­rg’s Ennerdale the

PA won a seat held by the ANC with 46.81% (3,233 votes) and voter turnout was 33.86%.

In by-elections held on April 24 in Swartland municipali­ty’s ward 11 in the DA-run Western Cape, the PA won a seat previously held by the DA with 40.18%. Voter turnout was 47.82%. The PA won another seat previously held by the ANC in ward 9 of Oudtshoorn municipali­ty, Western Cape, with 65.47%. Voter turnout was 47.02%.

In an interview with Business Day, Kunene said the state of Gauteng is a serious “indictment” of the ANC and Lesufi. “How did we get here? We got here because of the ANC’s poor economic policies which are destroying public institutio­ns. They make them dysfunctio­nal so that the private sector can take them over,” he said.

“The ANC has also destroyed public health institutio­ns. Our hospitals are viewed as death dens.”

Kunene complained about the province’s crime rate, saying the police were not doing enough to fight the scourge, “hence the proliferat­ion of the private security industry”.

Kunene also took issue with the R400bn township economy

— equivalent to nearly 8% of GDP annually and employing about 2.6-million people — saying that it was in the hands of “illegal foreigners”. “The ANC has destroyed the local economy. Illegal Pakistanis and Bangladesh­is are running the spaza shop sector,” said Kunene.

According to research by author, marketer and brand specialist GG Alcock, who has studied the township economy for almost 20 years, the sector comprises 30,000 spazarette­s (local supermarke­ts), which are valued at R200bn a year, dominated by Somalians, Ethiopians, Pakistanis and Bangladesh­is.

Home affairs minister Aaron Motsoaledi announced during a media briefing recently that the cabinet had approved the final white paper on citizenshi­p, immigratio­n and refuge protection, which advocates the overhaulin­g of the country’s immigratio­n laws.

In terms of the white paper,, all spaza shops need to be audited and registered to pay tax.

“We want spaza shops audited. We want the owners to come forward and the spaza shop to be registered. And when you register we want documentat­ion. If you don’t have documentat­ion, we will obviously have the spaza shop closed. If, on the other hand, you have the right to be in SA, all that is left is for you to register with the SA Revenue Service and start paying tax on that spaza shop.

“Then the department of health will have to make standards: you cannot sell food in this spaza shop and sleep there and cook there and eat there and wash inside there and hold prayer or Sunday services in there. That will have to be abolished,” he said.

The white paper is also aimed at cracking down on people seeking to reside in SA under false pretences. “Pan-Africanism does not promote illegality or illegal entry,” said Motsoaledi.

Kunene proclaimed: “When I become premier of Gauteng, the issue I will deal with first is the question of unemployme­nt. We are going to create permanent jobs by employing young people to maintain our public infrastruc­ture such as schools, hospitals and police stations, and make sure they are clean.”

He lashed out at Lesufi’s mass job creation programme, Nasi Ispani, framing it as an election gimmick that will not fly with the electorate. “Lesufi is taking advantage of our people.

Nasi Ispani is a joke,” he said. Lesufi said in February that in addition to the 6,000 crimepreve­ntion wardens already on board and making a “significan­t impact, we will further train about 3,000 additional young people to be deployed to fight crime at strategic levels, including in the taxi industry [and] business forums and prevent land invasions”.

Kunene claims some factories around Gauteng and farmers in the Western Cape employed undocument­ed immigrants so that they could exploit them by paying them far below the legislated national minimum wage of R27,58 an hour and withhold employment benefits from them.

“So, when we say they must not come to SA without proper documentat­ion, we are actually helping them from being exploited,” said Kunene.

“I’m going to clean Gauteng of all illegal immigrants when I become premier. There will be no [illegal] Pakistanis running spaza shops in Gauteng. Gauteng will be a no-go zone for illegal immigrants,” he said.

Together with water and electricit­y, the issue of immigratio­n has become a key electionee­ring point ahead of the May 29 general election. Kunene said big business was prepared to help South Africans start their own tuck/spaza shops in the townships and be in charge of the whole value chain.

In his state of the province address in February, Lesufi said the provincial government had over the past five years spent R15bn on township businesses.

“In the last year alone, we spent R2.2bn on township businesses which demonstrat­es our substantia­l investment to empowering township communitie­s, leading to increased economic activities, job creation and a positive impact on the unemployme­nt rate,” he said.

Unperturbe­d, Kunene said that if elected he would strive to make Gauteng once again lead “Africa in terms of economic growth and stimulatio­n”.

I’M GOING TO CLEAN GAUTENG OF ALL ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS WHEN I BECOME PREMIER … NO [ILLEGAL] PAKISTANIS

Kenny Kunene Patriotic Alliance deputy president

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