Abstract:
Xenophobia and Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs in Pretoria have
negative and positive consequences in the host society respectively. This study offers a detailed
examination of how Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs experience
xenophobia in Pretoria while conducting their business. It asks fundamental questions such as;
do individual Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs experience xenophobia
while conducting their business differently from Anglophone or Lusophone African informal
immigrant entrepreneurs in Pretoria? How does the individual experience of xenophobia
among Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs who conduct informal business
on sidewalks, differ from those who conduct informal business at street corners, on municipal
stalls or in small shops?
The study adopts an interpretivist methodological approach and a case study method to conduct
qualitative in-depth interviews with open-ended questions to collect data in order to find out
how Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs are discriminated against by
South Africans while conducting their business in Pretoria; to determine the type of harassment
that Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs experience in Pretoria while
conducting their business; to establish the perpetrators of xenophobic attacks against
Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs while conducting their business; and
to understand why Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs in Pretoria are
attacked while conducting their business.
The study found different ways Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs in
Pretoria experience discrimination while conducting their business. For example, the study
found how “skipping” Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs to buy from
local informal traders is an experience of discrimination that is common among Francophone
African informal immigrant entrepreneurs. The study also found that officials of the Tshwane
Metropolitan Police Department (TMPD) would impound the goods belonging to Francophone
African informal immigrant entrepreneurs who have valid trading licences to conduct informal
trade in the designated area without any justification or explanation. While local informal
traders who conducted informal trade without valid trading permits in the same area were
allowed to carry on trading and their goods were not impounded.
The study establishes different types of virtual, verbal, and physical harassment that
Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs have experienced in Pretoria while
conducting their business. It also establishes that high school boys; political affiliates, workers
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of Tshwane waste management service, football fans; members of “Izikhothane;” “Operation
Dudula are among the perpetrators of xenophobic attacks against Francophone African
informal immigrant entrepreneurs in Pretoria while conducting their business.
Lastly, the study found secular and nonsecular reasons why Francophone African informal
immigrant entrepreneurs are attacked in Pretoria while conducting their business. For example,
this study establishes that Francophone African informal immigrant entrepreneurs in Pretoria
were attacked while conducting their business because they fail to lend money to South
Africans or when they call the police about South Africans who were taking the law into their
own hands against them.