South Africa's migration crisis: From packing for Perth to departing for Dubai
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I am old enough to remember (but not vote in) South Africa's first democratic elections. I remember the buzz, the excitement, the long queues – and the fear – that surrounded that historic moment.
I was studying history in what is now Grade 11 at the time. No comments on my age please. It was truly a historic moment, and I'm forever grateful that I got to witness it first-hand.
A key aspect, however, was professional white people 'packing for Perth' as it became to be known then. Accountants, auditors, engineers, and many other people with specialised qualifications left.
They left because of the fear that the ANC would simply take away homes. Behind that fear was ignorance. I recall one conversation with my horse-riding instructor at the time during which she told me that she had a good laugh with her stable hand, asking him when he was going to move into her house. He replied that he 'thinks that other house over there is nicer'.
This was said in jest, by people who weren't scared.
Yet, there was so much fear that a slogan was created, with an acronym: EGBOK. I think it was the work of Jacaranda FM. And it stood for 'Everything is going to be OK'.
And it was. Until it wasn't.
People are leaving again. This time for tax-free destinations like Dubai where they can earn dollars (currently R17.70 to the dollar as I write this). Why are they leaving?
Afrobarometer cities, based on Statistics South Africa's data, that the top reasons are 'an ailing economy, chronic unemployment, high crime rates, energy instability, staggering inequality, poor delivery of public services, and political and diplomatic uncertainty'.
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In 2020, over 900,000 citizens lived abroad, mainly in the United Kingdom, Australia, the United States, New Zealand, and Canada. They are encouraged there by attractive salaries, career mobility, safety and security, ease of doing business, free medical care, free education, and a chance for moms and dads to make their kiddo's lives better.
We had a newsroom chat this morning and people are now moving to Dubai, the UAE, and probably Saudi Arabia as well.
Here's the problem. We need those skills. We need those people to mentor younger people. We have this unbelievable gap between what companies need in terms of skills and the abilities, if any, of youngsters coming out of our schooling system to match them.
Statistics South Africa on Tuesday morning released its latest employment print. South Africa's official unemployment rate has risen to 33.2% in the second quarter of 2025, up from 32.9% in the previous quarter.
More people joined the workforce. The number of unemployed individuals aged 15–34 increased by 39,000 to 4.9 million. And, while employment among youth rose by 31,000 to 5.7 million, while the youth unemployment rate held steady at 46.1%.
The Department of Basic Education isn't even focusing on future-fit teaching anymore in areas like robotics. Nope, it's now gone back to basics because our children simply cannot read or do basic math. That's so incredibly, incredibly, sad.

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Bloody idiots. Comrades, at least have the decency to do it properly: one payment, no paper trail, and preferably somewhere without a wine list and cameras. Of bribes, low class and no manners On the subject of bribes, many moons ago, a journalist walked into my office at the legislature, where I was serving as a media liaison officer. He was a familiar face – the kind of reporter who was practically part of the furniture in the media gallery. Without ceremony, as he lowered himself into the chair opposite me, I calmly closed my laptop and flipped my documents facedown. In those days, this was a standard practice, part of what the then National Intelligence Agency said was 'protocol'. We exchanged the usual pleasantries and small political talk. Then he got to the point. He claimed to have a mobile broadcast truck that could revolutionise our media coverage in community radio. I nodded politely, letting him make his case. And then came the hook: if I gave his company the job (tender), we would 'share the spoils'. Imagine walking past tight security, through the body scanner, into my office, and proposing a bribe without even an imvula mlomo to sweeten the deal – not so much as a courtesy cold beer or even a token gesture like a Glenfiddich 12-year-old. Just the raw, unseasoned proposition, slapped onto my desk like a resignation letter. Covert operation or the dumbest criminals? I looked him squarely in the eye and delivered the classic ANC denial: 'I do not sit in tender committees.' He stood up and left, an egg on his face – clearly runny, dripping, and visible from across the corridor. I threw my hands in the air, defeated, displeased, disillusioned, disheartened, disgusted, and frankly disturbed. What on Earth gave him the idea that I was bribeable? Was this a loyalty test, or was I on some underground BlackBerry Messenger list of 'low-maintenance' targets? The audacity haunted me for years. In the old political underworld, such an approach would have been carefully choreographed: a discreet third-party intermediary, a plausible cover story, and a brown envelope slipped under a desk marked 'Confidential.' But here was a man pitching corruption like a Makro clearance sale – blunt, artless, shame-free. I could not decide which was worse: his insult to my principles or the craft of bribery itself. If you're going to try to buy my silence, at least have the professional courtesy to follow the rules of the game. This, Comrades, was corruption without class. My leader, askies. I read in the news that the pipe-smoking former president, Thabo Mbeki, has joined forces with the FW de Klerk Foundation, other foundations and the Freedom Front Plus to snub the National Convention – the supposed launchpad for the National Dialogue. What common cause does Mbeki have with the apartheid apologists? Is it now a bridge too far to bribe the foundations? Neither Woolworths nor Makro offered financial or material support for this article. No bribes were paid or accepted, no animals harmed, and no journalists killed, as in Gaza.