The first of three chartered flights touched down in Accra this morning. 300 Ghanaians, mostly women and children, fled the xenophobic chaos gripping South Africa. Another 1,000 are still waiting for a way out.
This is a political earthquake, not a humanitarian one. The Commonwealth is supposed to be a club, a family. But right now, brothers are burning each other's shops. The violence, targeting foreign-owned businesses in Johannesburg and Pretoria, has left at least five dead. The real number is likely higher.
Let's cut through the noise. This is about presidential elections in both countries. In Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo needs a win. A swift, visible evacuation plays well at home. It distracts from a struggling economy. In South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa is losing control. The ANC is fracturing. The looting and attacks are a symptom of a deeper rot: 29% unemployment, inequality that would make a Victorian blush, and a ruling party that can't decide if it's in power or in opposition.
Ramaphosa called the violence 'unacceptable'. Fine words. But where is the police? Why were army deployments delayed? The answer is politics. The police commissioner is a Zuma loyalist. The defence minister is factionally aligned. Ramaphosa is a president without a party, a reformer without a mandate. His silence on the attacks for three days was deafening.
Ghana's evacuation is a pointed rebuke. It says: 'We can do what you cannot.' The optics are deliberate. Akufo-Addo personally greeted the first flight. He will milk this for every drop of political capital.
But the real story is the Commonwealth's paralysis. The Secretary-General, Patricia Scotland, issued a statement. It was bland, almost robotic. No trip to the region. No emergency summit. The organisation is a paper tiger. Its members know it. The violence in South Africa is a stress test. The Commonwealth is failing.
What comes next? Retaliation. Already, Nigerian social media is calling for a boycott of South African businesses across Africa. MTN, Shoprite, MultiChoice: they are vulnerable. South Africa's corporate empire in the rest of the continent is built on shaky ground. The violence in Hillbrow could trigger a trade war. The government in Pretoria is sleepwalking into a diplomatic disaster.
I've been watching the Lobby for two decades. This is the worst I've seen Commonwealth relations since the 1980s sanctions row. Back then, it was about apartheid. Now it's about the new apartheid: economic exclusion. The same rage that fuels the attacks also fuels the populist surge in Europe and America. It's a global epidemic.
For now, Ghana counts its citizens home. But the underlying disease remains untreated. Expect more evacuations. Expect more statements. Do not expect real action. That would require leaders who can see beyond the next election cycle. In this game, no one can.








