Opinion on Kenyans with irregular papers in South Africa

OPINION
Opinion on Kenyans with irregular papers in South Africa


By Dr. Benjamin Muindi

On June 26, 2026, the Kenya High Commission in Pretoria wrote a letter that should embarrass every leader in Nairobi.  

It asked South African authorities for “safe passage” for Kenyan nationals with irregular status to travel to Taifa House between June 27 and July 3. The purpose: emergency travel documents for repatriation.  

In plain language: Kenya had to beg a neighbour to let its own citizens get to the embassy without being arrested.  

That letter is not just paperwork. It is evidence of a country exporting its people because it has failed to lead them.  

A nation of departures

These are not tourists who missed flights. They are Kenyans who left because staying had become unbearable.  

When jobs are scarce, corruption is normal, and the cost of living chokes families, citizens will take any risk to survive. They cross borders without papers. They live in fear of arrest in South Africa. They enlist in wars they have no stake in. They take jobs abroad that turn into abuse.  

That is not migration in the hopeful sense. That is evacuation.  

From Johannesburg to Russia and the Gulf 

The Pretoria case is only one face of the crisis. In South Africa, many Kenyans are undocumented and exposed to exploitation and xenophobia. They chose that risk because the alternative at home felt worse.  

Further afield, the cost is heavier. Over the last few years, Kenyan men have been recruited into the war in Russia. Not for ideology, but for money. Some have died there, in a conflict that is not theirs.  

In Saudi Arabia and across the Gulf, Kenyan women have been trapped in domestic work that becomes torture. There are cases of unpaid wages, confiscated passports, beatings, and conditions that amount to modern slavery. Many went because agents promised opportunity, and because Kenya offered none.  

When a state cannot keep its people safe at home, it cannot pretend shock when they are unsafe abroad.  

A government that only cleans up 

The pattern is clear. The state appears after the damage. Embassies issue emergency documents. Officials negotiate repatriation. Families raise funds to bring bodies home.  

What is missing is prevention. Where are the safe, legal, and well-regulated migration pathways? Where is the protection system for Kenyans already abroad? Where is the economic plan that makes Kenya a place young people want to stay?  

A government that only manages collapse is not governing. It is presiding over an exit.  

The price of bad leadership

Bad governance has a human cost, and Kenyans are paying it.  

Billions meant for jobs, health, and education vanish through corruption. Nepotism blocks qualified youth. Taxes rise, but services collapse. Small businesses are crushed by bureaucracy. Hospitals lack drugs, yet leaders fly abroad for treatment.  

When a young graduate cannot get a job without “connections,” the message is clear: the state is not for you. So you leave.  

Some who leave send remittances. Many do not make it. Some are jailed. Some are exploited. Some return in coffins. That is the bill for leadership failure.  

What a responsible state must do

First, admit the problem. Kenya is losing citizens because it has not built a country worth staying in. Denial will not bring them back.  

Second, fix the economy at home. Cut waste. Prosecute corruption without exception. Lower the cost of doing business. Invest in manufacturing, agriculture, technical skills, and digital work. Jobs are not slogans. They are policy outcomes.  

Third, protect Kenyans abroad. Negotiate labor agreements with real enforcement. Ban predatory recruitment agencies. Fund consular services so a Kenyan in distress is not left to social media for rescue. Create a rapid response unit for citizens in crisis in Russia, the Gulf, South Africa, and beyond.  

Fourth, build legal pathways. Migration will happen. The choice is between safe, documented, and dignified migration, or dangerous, irregular, and exploitative migration. A serious state chooses the former and funds it.  

Home must feel like home again 

No sovereign country should have to request “safe passage” for its people to escape despair and come home.  

Kenya is not short of talent, ambition, or hard work. It is short of leadership that is accountable, competent, and compassionate.  

Until that changes, we will keep watching our sons die in foreign wars, our daughters suffer abuse abroad, and our graduates hide from police in other countries.  

Kenya must become a place to build in again. Otherwise, we will keep exporting desperation instead of citizens.

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