South Africa’s Readiness for the June 30 Protests
Police Activation
According to the South African Police Service (SAPS), the country stayed stable in the 24 hours before the planned demonstrations on June 30. The Justice, Crime Prevention and Security Cluster switched on its national operational plan, and Lt. Gen. Tebello Mosikili announced that Operation June 30 had moved into full rollout. Police units were sent out in all nine provinces.
Real‑time Intelligence
The National Joint Operational and Intelligence Structures, provincial command centres and field teams worked around the clock. Public‑order police, specialised response teams and the SAPS Air Wing stayed on standby. Intelligence officers watched events live and gave incident commanders constant updates so decisions could be made fast.
Statement of Readiness
Protecting Peaceful Protests
Mosikili said, “The state is ready. Law enforcement is ready. South Africa is ready.” She added that contingency plans had been tested and there would be “no security vacuum.” Authorities will protect lawful and peaceful demonstrations but will not tolerate criminal acts.
Zero Tolerance for Crime
She warned that no one should be allowed to intimidate communities, shut down the economy, block people from work, school or health facilities, damage infrastructure, loot stores or attack police officers. Dangerous weapons—including firearms, knives and traditional weapons—are banned from demonstrations under Section 17 of the Constitution.
Arrests and Xenophobia Cases
Recent Arrests in Johannesburg
Four people were arrested after they allegedly entered the home of a Congolese family in Rosettenville, Johannesburg, over the weekend. They face charges of public violence and house robbery.
Stats Since March
Since March 1, police have opened 103 cases linked to xenophobic sentiment, leading to the arrest of 195 suspects. Breakdown by province:
– KwaZulu‑Natal: 39 cases, 11 arrests
– Free State: 29 cases, 153 arrests
– Western Cape: 15 cases, 14 arrests
– Eastern Cape: 12 cases, nine arrests
– Gauteng: four cases, five arrests
– arrests
– Mpumalanga: three cases, three arrests
The Abahambe‑linked protest
Simphiwe James Bonile, the alleged leader of the Abahambe‑linked to xenophobic sentiment, leading to the arrest of 195 suspects. Breakdown by province:
– KwaZulu‑Natal: 39 cases, 11 arrests
– Free State: 29 cases, 153 arrests
– Western Cape: 15 cases, 14 arrests
– Eastern Cape: 12 cases, nine arrests
– Gauteng: four cases, five arrests
– Mpumalanga: three cases, three arrests
Repatriations and Deportations
Mosikili noted that more than 2 800 people believed to be in South Africa illegally were arrested last week, pushing the total since January past 50 000. Four deaths tied to xenophobic sentiment have been recorded this year—two in KwaZulu‑Natal and two in the Western Cape. Over 25 000 foreigners have been repatriated so far, with buses moving deportees to ports of entry under police escort and checkpoints confirming passenger details. No unscheduled stops are made to keep the process safe and orderly.
Increased Police Presence
Deployment Across Provinces
Thousands of officers from SAPS, metro police and provincial transport services have been positioned nationwide. Specialist units guard critical infrastructure, transport routes, airports, ports, hospitals and shopping centres.
Monitoring Online Threats
Authorities are also watching social media. Mosikili warned that inciting violence online is a crime and investigations are already underway. She urged protest organisers and participants to stay peaceful, follow agreed routes and cooperate with police.
Call to the Public
Peaceful Protest Advice
Mosikili called on South Africans to remain calm and not be swayed by threats or false information circulating on social media.
Staying Calm Online
She reminded anyone thinking of using violence, looting, intimidation, roadblocks or attacks on officials that law enforcement will step in immediately, followed by arrests, investigations and prosecutions. “The rule of law, not threats, fear or intimidation, prevails in the Republic of South Africa,” she concluded.
Conclusion
South Africa has mobilised a comprehensive security operation for the June 30 protests. Police are fully deployed, intelligence is flowing in real time, and clear messages stress that peaceful demonstrations are welcome while any criminal behaviour will be met with swift action. The goal is to keep the nation safe, protect citizens’ rights to protest, and uphold the rule of law without giving space to fear or misinformation.


