Ghana defers Ramaphosa visit as anti-migrant violence opens a diplomatic rift with South Africa
Ghana has asked to postpone Cyril Ramaphosa's visit after a wave of xenophobic violence in South Africa that has already sent around 1,000 Ghanaians home.
A presidential visit that isn’t happening — for now — is exposing one of Africa’s most sensitive crises: violence against migrants in South Africa. Ghana has asked to postpone Cyril Ramaphosa’s trip to Accra, where the two presidents were due to co-chair the bi-national commission that coordinates cooperation between the two countries.
Why was Ramaphosa’s visit deferred?
Security, and politics. In recent weeks a wave of xenophobic demonstrations and attacks on African migrants has spread across parts of South Africa, and the Ghanaian community has been hit directly: a Ghanaian national was killed on 30 June during the protests, around 1,000 Ghanaians have already returned home and close to 900 more are registering for repatriation. With tempers running hot, Accra feared Ramaphosa’s presence could trigger a hostile public reaction — a risk it chose not to take.
What is Ghana demanding from South Africa?
Concrete action to stop the attacks, and firm guarantees of safety for Ghanaians living in the country. Only then, Accra says, will a state visit go ahead. Pretoria disputes the story altogether: the South African presidency denies any visit request was rejected and talks of disinformation — its official line is published on the South African presidency’s website. Amid the duelling statements, the bi-national commission is left without a date.
The backdrop is familiar: migration pressure, high unemployment and anti-immigrant movements gaining ground in South Africa. It’s a reminder that tension over migration is not a European monopoly — in Europe the borders changed rules too, with the EU’s new entry-exit system, but there the fight happens at counters and biometrics, not in the streets.
Image: Lula Oficial / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)