Prince Kaybee is no stranger to viral moments, but this one struck a deeper nerve. The award-winning DJ and producer recently shared that he is often mistaken for a foreigner by airport staff in South Africa. What might sound like a small inconvenience quickly turned into a bigger conversation about identity, perception, and belonging in Mzansi.
According to Prince Kaybee, the mix-ups usually happen while travelling through local airports, where officials assume he is not South African. His comment landed hard with fans who felt the experience reflected a wider issue many locals quietly deal with, especially those who do not fit outdated ideas of what a South African is supposed to look or sound like.
Why his comment hit a nerve online
Mzansi social media did what it does best. Within hours, people were sharing their own stories of being questioned, profiled, or treated differently in spaces meant to serve everyone equally. Some laughed it off with humour, while others pointed out how tiring it can be to constantly explain where you are from in your own country.
Many fans also brought politics into the mix. A number of users recalled earlier warnings by EFF leader Julius Malema about how quickly South Africans can turn on each other, especially when it comes to nationality and identity. For them, Prince Kaybee’s experience felt like proof that those concerns were not exaggerated.
More than a celebrity complaint
What gave Prince Kaybee’s story weight was how relatable it felt beyond fame. Airports are meant to be gateways, not places where people feel questioned or othered. In a country with a painful history of division, moments like these reopen conversations about how deeply some assumptions still run.
Prince Kaybee has long been vocal about social issues, often using his platform to challenge uncomfortable truths. This time, he did not frame himself as a victim but rather highlighted something that happens so casually it has become normalised.
This is the 2nd time a lady working at the airport calls me a foreigner here in South Africa 😅
— PRINCE KAYBEE (@KabeloMusic) January 28, 2026
A reminder of who belongs
For many South Africans, his comment served as a reminder that nationality is not a look, an accent or a surname. It is a shared experience shaped by history, struggle and culture. The fact that a well-known local star can still be mistaken for an outsider shows how much work remains in unlearning stereotypes.
While the airport mix-up might seem minor on the surface, the reaction proves it touched something real. Prince Kaybee’s story has once again pushed a national conversation into the open, asking a simple but powerful question. Who gets to decide who belongs in South Africa?
Source: Briefly News
Featured Image: DJs Production
