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Human Rights Day 2026: A hollow symbol for millions living in poverty and fear

While President Cyril Ramaphosa spoke on the “importance of human rights” this week, the reality faced by millions of South Africans is one of meagre meals, despair and keeping possessions under lock and key against crime.

For more than 12,4 million unemployed people in the country — nearly 43% (Statistics South Africa: February 2026) — Human Rights Day is no cause for celebration, but a bitter reminder of lost opportunities and empty promises.

Add to that highly skilled and talented citizens who work only a few days a month or half-days, along with many others who are completely underutilised, and the picture looks even worse.

A job and a proper meal have become somewhat of a privilege in South Africa, afforded to very few.

The Freedom Front Plus (VF Plus) wishes to pause and reflect on unemployment for a moment. Statistics so easily serve as a euphemism for real suffering. Cold, hard facts cannot convey the depth of true hardship.

Unemployment is so much more: it is a harsh reality that completely strips people of their human dignity. Being unemployed is to live in fear. It is the humiliation of a father who cannot buy food or clothes for his children; the dread of a family losing their possessions; absolute hopelessness and terror that drive people over the edge.

While politically connected BEE-made billionaires and millionaires feast at the table of comfort and luxury, millions are starving. That is the reality.

Even those with jobs are justified in questioning how their human rights are realised when they have to live behind burglar bars, lock themselves in at night and activate alarms out of fear of crime.

Warning signs have been put up in the beautiful Cape mountains: Walk in groups or stay away. Nails and rocks are spread on the country’s roads to force motorists to stop and then they are violently attacked.

Many towns and cities in the country have no electricity or water supply for long periods. Sewage flows through streets and into rivers. Your property may lawfully be expropriated without compensation. Minorities must fight to retain the right to use their mother tongue at school. Legislation favours people based solely on their skin colour.

Thirty years of Black Economic Empowerment (BEE), cadre deployment and corruption have destroyed infrastructure and state institutions.

In Parliament, testimony is currently being heard implicating top police officials in networks of organised crime.

Instead of more hollow words on human rights, the President should ask forgiveness and account for the dire situation into which the ANC government has plunged South Africans over the last three decades.

Actual human rights are based on safety, a job, food on the table and the protection of property rights – not political rhetoric.

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