This view is generated from the clustered articles, so it is best read as a map of coverage rather than a replacement for the source reporting.
- All covering sources confirm over 900 people were arrested during the June 30 protests, including approximately 300 undocumented migrants.
- Sources agree the majority of protests were peaceful but isolated incidents turned violent with looting of foreign-owned businesses.
- Daily Maverick emphasises the trauma of documented migrants forced to flee, interrogating the state's failure to protect legal residents; El Tiempo frames it as a broader xenophobia pattern without the individual testimony depth of Daily Maverick.
The full number of foreign nationals who fled South African towns and the total property damage from looting remain unconfirmed in available summaries.
The Nigerian government's response — documenting abandoned businesses for compensation — is covered by BBC but absent from South African outlets, which do not report on the diplomatic dimension of the crisis.
Protest scale and arrest numbers are well-sourced; refugee flight numbers and property damage remain unquantified.
- Arrest figures (900 total, ~300 undocumented migrants) are clearly sourced but ambiguity: does '300 undocumented' represent portion of 900 or separate count?
- Nigerian government compensation claim is mentioned only for BBC coverage but not elaborated—diplomatic dimension underexplored but fairly noted as omission
Daily Maverick provides the most detailed coverage, using personal testimony from a Zimbabwean fleeing Mossel Bay and meticulous documentation of police arrests and protest geography to interrogate institutional failure in protecting migrants.
El Tiempo reports one death and more than 900 arrests, framing it as a recurring xenophobic problem in South Africa with regional diplomatic consequences for neighbouring countries.