Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Let Ramaphosa say the truth

Photo credit: Sunday World

The on-going anti-foreigners' protests will change momentum on the 4th of May 2026 and all we want is for the President of the Republic of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa; is the truth.

The truth is bitter, but it needs to be told to those un-educated sets of South Africans causing un-rest, killings, looting and total chaos in the country. 

Obviously, lack of knowledge from some groups of people in South Africa is causing problems. The government of South Africa is failing to educate its people about the involvement of foreign countries in making what the country is today.

Someone somewhere is not doing his job. Failure to teach the past to the people of South Africa is making them obviously barbaric. No countries can stand alone and succeed alone. We need one another to survive and if South Africa of today is mature enough to stand alone then the rest of Africa is ready to turn our back against them.

Mozambique supplies South Africa electricity; Nigeria supplies petrol and many other countries that I cannot include at this time. 

If South Africa is the boss; we will soon find out but if the killings of Nigerians continue, I will use this medium to tell you (South Africans); we will turn our back, and I know the rest of Africa will follow suit.

Ramaphosa must provide millies corns for his villagers and keep them where they belong; least the rest of Africa cut them off!

By Olagunju, Success Taiwo.

Here's AI Overview of South Africa's dependance of Nigerian oil:

South Africa is increasingly dependent on Nigeria for petroleum products, with South Africa now Africa's biggest petrol importer, dethroning Nigeria. South Africa currently relies on imports for over 60% of its fuel, importing substantial crude oil from Nigeria and negotiating a 12-month supply contract with the Dangote Refinery. This shift, driven by declining local refining capacity, has elevated Nigeria to a primary fuel source.
  • Growing Dependence: As of 2025/2026, South Africa now Africa's biggest petrol importer, dethroning Nigeria, with imports meeting over 60% of demand, as described on Facebook.
  • Shifting Supply Chain: South Africa depends on Nigerian oil to keep fuel flowing, with Arise News reporting that South Africa is turning to Nigeria as a key source of fuel.
  • Refining Decline: South Africa's refining capacity has halved since 2020 due to plant shutdowns, forcing a high reliance on international suppliers, as explained on TopAuto.co.za.
  • Future Security: While supply is currently stable, experts warn on Facebook that heavy reliance on imports makes South Africa vulnerable to supply chain disruptions

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