So here we are again. South Africa, the so-called Rainbow Nation, convulsing in a fit of anti-immigrant hysteria. Ghana, the self-styled beacon of African stability, scrambles to pull three hundred of its citizens out of the maelstrom. And what does the United Kingdom do? It offers consular aid, a pat on the head from the old colonial master. This is not a news report. This is a farce, a tired re-enactment of historical cycles that we refuse to learn from.
Let us dissect the situation with the cold precision of a Victorian anatomist. South Africa’s anti-immigrant riots are not a spontaneous outburst of xenophobia. They are the predictable consequence of a state that has failed to provide for its own people. The country’s economy, a hollow shell of its post-apartheid promise, has left millions jobless and bitter. The foreigner, the easy target, is blamed. This is the same script that played out in the Fall of Rome, when Goths and Visigoths were demonised for the Empire’s internal rot. Rome fell not because of the barbarians at the gate, but because of the decadence within. South Africa, take note.
Ghana’s evacuation is a logistical triumph? Hardly. Three hundred people is a trifle. The real question is why Ghanaian citizens were in South Africa in such numbers to begin with. Because Ghana, for all its vaunted stability, has failed to create opportunities for its own youth. The same young men who queue for hours to vote in Accra are the ones fleeing to Johannesburg in search of work. This is the bitter fruit of post-colonial incompetence, a story of elites who talk of Pan-Africanism while their economies crumble.
And what of the UK’s consular aid? A generous offer, no doubt. But let us not mistake charity for policy. The British government, in offering help, is merely polishing its own image as a responsible global actor. Meanwhile, back in London, the Home Office is deporting migrants with equal vigour. The hypocrisy is staggering. We offer aid to Ghana for a problem we helped create through centuries of exploitation, then wash our hands of the mess.
This event is a mirror. In it, we see the intellectual decadence of our era, the refusal to grapple with systemic failures. We focus on the evacuation, the humanitarian gesture, the diplomatic niceties. We avoid the uncomfortable truths: that South Africa’s economy is in ruins, that Ghana’s leadership is feckless, that the UK’s offer is a Band-Aid on a bullet wound. We are living through a period of decline, and we lack the courage to name it.
Some will call me a pessimist, a contrarian. Perhaps. But history is not on the side of optimism. The Roman Empire did not collapse in a day. It decayed slowly, with each generation convincing itself that the next would solve the problems. We are that generation. And we are failing. The riots in South Africa, the evacuation from Ghana, the aid from the UK: these are not isolated events but symptoms of a deeper malaise. National identity, once a source of pride, has become a weapon. Intellectualism has given way to empty rhetoric. We are sleepwalking into the abyss.
So read this column and be annoyed. Be provoked. But do not look away. The evacuation of three hundred Ghanaians is a trivial thing. The dissolution of order, the erosion of empathy, the decay of competence: that is the real story. And it is the story of our time.








