Socio-Economic Services for Addressing Effects of Xenophobic Attacks on Migrant and Refugee Entrepreneurs in South Africa: A Multi-Sectoral Perspective
Abstract
1. Introduction
Xenophobic attacks resulted in 694 deaths, 5648 looted shops, and 128,849 displacements between 1994 and August 2025. In May 2008, attacks took place in at least 135 locations across the country. The perpetrators of such attacks did not target white people but rather migrants from other African countries and, to a lesser degree, from South Asian countries, whom they blamed for increased crime and the high unemployment rate in South Africa.
1.1. Xenophobia: Regional and National Trends
7072 asylum applications by refugees were received in 2024 in South Africa, according to UNHCR. Most of them came from Ethiopia, Congo (Democratic Republic of Congo), and Somalia. A total of 13,139 decisions have been made on initial applications. Around 12% of them answered positively. 88 per cent of asylum applications have been rejected in the first instance. The most successful have been the applications of refugees from Cambodia and Palestine [12].
In 2024, a total of 2,631,100 migrants lived in South Africa, representing about 4.1 per cent of the total population. These are all residents who live permanently in the country but were born in another country. The numbers include granted refugees but no asylum seekers [12].
1.2. Effects of Xenophobic Attacks
1.3. Legislative and Policy Responses to Xenophobic Attacks
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Biographical Profile of Participants
3.2. Services from the Government
The South African government did not do anything. When the police come to that side [the place he used to operate his business], they just come to investigate. We do not see any help from the Government. (Participant 3)
They did nothing, someone said, I must go ask the Government. Now it is ten years, and I have nothing. The government is not saying anything. I see nothing from anybody, money, nothing. The police said nothing. You open the case with the Government, and nothing comes up. The Government has money but does not want to help us, like now, I have been waiting for assistance for many years. (Participant 1)
You see, if I had the money, I was going to open another one. Now, if the government can give me the money, I will go and open another shop. (Participant 3)
We are waiting for the government to try something for us, not only for me, but for everyone else. Maybe money to assist each one to start the business again. Now we don’t have power, and there is no money. (Participant 7)
I think the government must educate those people to also treat us like human beings. They must not consider us like animals, where they can take everything from us just like that. (Participant 6)
The government can pass laws that state that anybody practising xenophobia is going to be in jail for ten years or eleven years. (Participant 8)
3.3. Services from the CIVIL Society Organisations
3.3.1. Community Support
You know, you people [the researcher as a South African] are not the same. There are people in South Africa who are good, you know. (Participant 1)
If I am surviving, it is because of the South African people. You see, I have left some of the family members at home, but here I am, and I have found kind, loving, and helpful people. (Participant 2)
Even from South Africans, for example, they can say: My friend, tomorrow do not go to work and take care of yourself. That is being caring. (Participant 9)
3.3.2. Spiritual Support
We also want pastors to preach about it in the pulpit in the church, anywhere, whether you are a Christian or a Muslim. We want this to spread to everybody. Maybe when the pastor is preaching inside the church, they can spread the word outside. (Participant 2)
My church is supporting me, they teach me how to survive, how to take care of my brother, and not treat him badly, and to stay good. (Participant 4)
In the church, if you have a problem, the people support you. They offer things like food, and some will offer money to take care of your family, buy things for the family. (Participant 10)
3.3.3. Support from Fellow Refugees
Like us Ethiopians, we have a group of people from Ethiopia, and we try to see that if someone needs something, we try to see how to assist them. (Participant 8)
I tried working for myself, but my friend told me: No, please come and work with me, you cannot stay at home. Even though your wife is working, come and work with me. I will give you something to eat, school, and transport. (Participant 9)
I advise my fellow refugees not to stay away from each other; everybody should stay in the township so that they are closer to their countrymen. When there are xenophobic attacks, we quickly circulate the information in our networks and say: Please don’t come to the shop today, please don’t come, people are attacking the shops. That’s what saved me that day. (Participant 5)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
5.1. Limitations of the Study
5.2. Significance and Implications of the Study
5.3. Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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| Participant | Age | Nationality | Number of Years in Atteridgeville | Type of Business |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 38 | Ethiopian | 7 | Spaza shop |
| 2 | 40 | Nigerian | 5 | Spaza shop |
| 3 | 35 | Burundian | 7 | Spaza shop |
| 4 | 38 | Ethiopian | 7 | Spaza shop |
| 5 | 36 | Nigerian | 7 | Spaza shop |
| 6 | 35 | Ethiopian | 10 | Spaza shop |
| 7 | 40 | Congolese | 9 | Spaza shop |
| 8 | 45 | Ethiopian | 8 | Spaza shop |
| 9 | 38 | Congolese | 8 | Spaza shop |
| 10 | 35 | Ethiopian | 6 | Spaza shop |
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Sibanda, S.; Murenje, M.; Masinga, P.; Lelope, L.A. Socio-Economic Services for Addressing Effects of Xenophobic Attacks on Migrant and Refugee Entrepreneurs in South Africa: A Multi-Sectoral Perspective. Societies 2025, 15, 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc15120321
Sibanda S, Murenje M, Masinga P, Lelope LA. Socio-Economic Services for Addressing Effects of Xenophobic Attacks on Migrant and Refugee Entrepreneurs in South Africa: A Multi-Sectoral Perspective. Societies. 2025; 15(12):321. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc15120321
Chicago/Turabian StyleSibanda, Sipho, Mutsa Murenje, Poppy Masinga, and Lekopo Alinah Lelope. 2025. "Socio-Economic Services for Addressing Effects of Xenophobic Attacks on Migrant and Refugee Entrepreneurs in South Africa: A Multi-Sectoral Perspective" Societies 15, no. 12: 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc15120321
APA StyleSibanda, S., Murenje, M., Masinga, P., & Lelope, L. A. (2025). Socio-Economic Services for Addressing Effects of Xenophobic Attacks on Migrant and Refugee Entrepreneurs in South Africa: A Multi-Sectoral Perspective. Societies, 15(12), 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc15120321

