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Zimbabwean tycoon Kudakwashe Tagwirei pledges $1 million to bring 20,000 stranded Zimbabweans home from South Africa

Kudakwashe Tagwirei and his wife Sandra have pledged $1 million through their Bridging Gaps Foundation to fund emergency repatriation of 20,000 Zimbabweans from South Africa.

Zimbabwean tycoon Kudakwashe Tagwirei pledges $1 million to bring 20,000 stranded Zimbabweans home from South Africa
Kudakwashe Tagwirei

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Zimbabwean businessman Kudakwashe Tagwirei and his wife Sandra Tagwirei have pledged $1 million through their Bridging Gaps Foundation to fund the emergency repatriation of up to 20,000 Zimbabwean nationals caught in the wave of anti-immigrant violence that has driven hundreds of Zimbabweans to sleep on Cape Town pavements in the rain while waiting for government assistance to get home.

An official acknowledgement letter dated June 26, 2026, confirms that Zimbabwe's Ministry of Local Government and Public Works formally accepted the donation offer and welcomed the foundation's intervention. The letter, signed by Chief Director of Civil Protection P. Nkomo on behalf of the Secretary for Local Government and Public Works, expressed appreciation to the Bridging Gaps Foundation for its swift response and outlined the operational requirements for deploying the pledge. The ministry requested the foundation to complete procurement processes and hand over a fleet of buses for the repatriation operation, specifying how many vehicles would operate within South Africa and how many would be stationed at the Beitbridge Border Post to manage the Zimbabwe-side logistics.

Once fully operational, the programme is expected to provide safe transport for up to 20,000 Zimbabweans, significantly extending the government's humanitarian response capacity at a moment when the scale of the crisis has overwhelmed the consular infrastructure deployed to manage it.

The crisis unfolding across South Africa's major cities has been building for weeks, driven by an unofficial June 30 deadline set by the anti-immigrant group March and March calling for undocumented foreign nationals to leave the country voluntarily, a deadline accompanied by threats of violence that have prompted tens of thousands of African nationals to seek emergency repatriation regardless of their documentation status. More than 500 Zimbabweans gathered outside their country's consulate in Cape Town's District Six in the days preceding June 30, sleeping on pavements through cold nights and heavy rain with plastic-wrapped suitcases, infants and elderly relatives, waiting to be processed for return. On Sunday morning, the City of Cape Town, the Department of Home Affairs and the Zimbabwean Consulate began relocating those who had spent up to five nights on the pavement to the Home Affairs refugee centre in Epping.

The scenes in Cape Town are replicated in other South African cities. Hundreds of Malawian nationals have gathered at their consulate in Johannesburg. Nigerian nationals have boarded government-organised flights from Johannesburg. Mozambican, Ghanaian, Congolese and Kenyan nationals have also been caught in the anti-immigrant pressure that South African authorities have insisted must be addressed through proper immigration enforcement rather than vigilante action.

Tagwirei's $1 million pledge is his most visible humanitarian intervention on behalf of Zimbabwean nationals abroad, coming through the Bridging Gaps Foundation, a philanthropic vehicle he established and has used to fund education across Zimbabwe, including significant contributions to Adventist schools and universities. In March 2025, the foundation received the Global Award of Excellence from the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in recognition of those educational contributions. In March 2026, Tagwirei pledged $350,000 toward the rehabilitation of Ingutsheni Central Hospital, Zimbabwe's main psychiatric hospital.

Tagwirei is the founder of Sakunda Holdings, a Zimbabwean conglomerate with interests in energy, mining, agriculture and infrastructure, and has been a close advisor to President Emmerson Mnangagwa. He has been under sanctions from both the United States and the United Kingdom since 2020 and 2021 respectively over allegations of corruption linked to his role in Zimbabwe's Command Agriculture programme and Treasury bill redemptions, allegations he has consistently denied. The US expanded its sanctions in March 2024 and added him to procurement exclusion lists in March 2026. He was present at the meeting between Mnangagwa and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in May 2026, a visit that the South African DA opposition described as raising concern about the influence of sanctioned Zimbabwean businesspeople on bilateral relations.

The bus fleet Tagwirei's foundation will procure represents the most immediate practical expression of the $1 million pledge, giving the Zimbabwean government the transport capacity to move large numbers of people from South Africa's major cities to Beitbridge and onward to their home communities in Zimbabwe. The Zimbabwe government has separately appealed for additional support from development partners, churches and the broader private sector as it scales up its repatriation response.

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