Tag: Xenophobia

  • Xenophobia: House of Reps may opt for doctrine of reciprocity

    Xenophobia: House of Reps may opt for doctrine of reciprocity

    Though desirous of a deep legislative relationships with South-Africa, the House of Representatives is upbeat about Nigeria exploring the doctrine of reciprocity if all diplomatic options fail to curb attacks on its citizens living in South Africa. The House arrived at the decision following the outcome of its ad hoc Committee on the attacks on Nigerians and looting of their property in South Africa.

    The committee, headed by the Majority Leader, Femi Gbajabiamila, went to South Africa where several revelations were discovered following meetings with various government establishments and groups with the sole aim of carrying out its mandate to the letter. It also met with former President Thabo Mbeki. The high powered delegation was asked to remind South Africa of the consequences of these ongoing xenophobic attacks against Nigerian citizens and the likely resultant repercussions. The Committee was also asked to make it explicitly clear to the South African Government that Nigeria undoubtedly has no intention of abandoning her citizens in South Africa to the mercy of nationalists, mobsters and radical militants taking the law into their hands in a sovereign and democratic country.

    The trip made it the first time that the parliaments of both countries had engaged in such a manner and it was even more regrettable the circumstance that had made such a meeting expedient. The delegation also met with the Nigerian Union in South Africa which gave it an insight into the plight of Nigerians in South Africa to the extent that the activities of very few notorious Nigerians often led to the maltreatment of the majority of other law abiding and very hardworking Nigerians. The Nigerian Union stated that in view of the fact that the overwhelming majority of Nigerians add value to the South African society via various important fields, like the academics, medicine, legal, engineering, business, and artisans and so on, it was very paramount to protect the lives of Nigerians in the country.

    At the end, the Ad Hoc Committee found out that majority of Nigerians living in South Africa are law abiding and are involved in various facets of the South African society including professionals adding value to the country in meaningful sectors like health, engineering, Information Technology etc.

    In view of its findings, the Ad Hoc Committee took its report to the floor last week where most of its recommendations were adopted. It was recommended that the House evolves legislative instruments such as hate crime laws to promote tenets of solidarity, support and protection for Nigerians living in diaspora towards finding lasting solutions to the crisis in South Africa and other similar cases.

    “The House directs the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Nigerian Consulate in South Africa to work together with their South African counterparts, where expedient, in helping to quickly resolve matters regarding passports as well as regularizing migrant status of Nigerians, particularly those with South African spouses.

    In his closing remarks Gbajabiamila said, “The Ad-hoc Committee wishes to state that the issue of parliamentary diplomacy is one that has evolved to stay, since most countries of the world have adopted democratic governance. For this reason, inter-parliamentary relations must go beyond the confines of attending conferences and seminars of international and regional parliamentary associations.

    As earlier noted, building on this latest attempt can only expand the frontiers of engagement in the vast issues of parliamentary diplomacy. It will thus help to resolve the crisis in South Africa, serve as a reference in future; and this newly found working relationship is expected to further tighten the Union between the two nations and African as a whole”.

    The House was in consonance with the recommendations of the ad hoc Committee with the adoption of the report.

  • Xenophobia: Nigeria, South Africa set up early warning centre

    Xenophobia: Nigeria, South Africa set up early warning centre

    Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama says Nigeria and South Africa have set up a 24-hour early warning system to protect Nigerians from unwarranted attacks.

    Onyeama said at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Forum in Abuja that Federal Government was ready to intervene.

    “Wherever any Nigerian is threatened or in difficulty, we will always intervene quickly, an example of this was in Italy, you will recall last year or the year before there was a Nigerian who was attacked and killed.

    “We quickly engaged with Italian Government and really took all the necessary steps, arresting people and pay compensation to the family. So we will always engage to protect Nigeria lives wherever they may be.

    “We are hoping now to set up a 24-hour call centre so that Nigerians anywhere in the world can call a particular number whenever they are in distress,”

    He said that the Nigerian High Commission in South Africa had been directed to facilitate legal support to help the victims of recent xenophobic attacks in the country to get their compensations.

    The minister said that the victims of the attacks had been advised to make inventory of their losses through a mechanism that had been created, known as the early warning unit.

    “What we have done is that we visited the scenes of these attacks; we spoke to victims, we saw their businesses and we advised them to make an inventory of their losses.

    “And, that the mechanism we have created, the early warning unit, what will then happened is that they should submit all their claims through the Nigerian High Commission to be presented at a high level meeting to push the issue of compensation.

    “First of all we have to see what the insurance laws provide and really take it from there; the important thing is that this should be addressed.

    “We also asked the high commission to facilitate with legal support, to identifying lawyers and all that to help in the process.

    Onyeama decried attacks on Nigerians in South Africa and India which sometimes led to death and expressed concern that the South African situation was more troubling because it often re-occurred.

    “We have engaged directly with the highest levels of government of South Africa. The Vice President of South Africa spoke with the Acting President at the time

    “I went to South Africa with the Minister of Interior and we were able to get the South African Government to set up an early warning unit.

    “We wanted an institutional mechanism that will address the issue of xenophobia in South Africa.’’

    Onyeama said that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs identified the fact that the Nigerian Union in South Africa did not have any access to the South African Government.

    He said the Nigerian community felt it was at the mercy of the South African police.

    “We were able to get the early warning unit, comprising the Nigerian High Commission there and the Nigerian Consulate but most importantly, the Nigerian Union in South Africa.

    “On the South African side, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Home Affairs which is in charge of the police and the police.

    “They will be meeting regularly to share intelligence, share information, build trust and develop strategies for early warning intervention.

    “We thought that was a very important achievement; it is institutionalised, they meet once every quarter or they could meet earlier,” he said.

    The minister said that he had directed the Nigerian High Commissioner in South Africa to arrange the first meeting as quickly as possible.

    He expressed the hope that the step would go a long way to address the situation.

    Onyeama described the attack on Nigerians in India as a one-off thing because it was a response to a particular incident.

    He said what was gratifying about the Indian case was that the Indian Government was very quick in condemning and arresting suspects. (NAN)

  • Xenophobia: Five Nigerians attacked in S/Africa again

    The Nigeria Union in South Africa, on Tuesday said five Nigerians had been attacked in Polokwane, Limpopo Province of that country in renewed xenophobic attacks.

    Mr Collin Mgbo, Secretary of the Union in the Province, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), on telephone from Polokwane that three of the five Nigerians attacked were in critical condition in the hospital.

    “I received a call that a Nigerian was attacked at Ivy Park in Polokwane on March 15. I got to the scene and saw that the Nigerian was almost dead, his house was looted and burnt”, he said.

    Mgbo said another Nigerian was also attacked in the same neighbourhood same day and that while he got to the scene, the mob left the wounded man and descended on him.

    “They left the wounded Nigerian and faced me. They destroyed my car and I managed to escape and ran to a police station”, he said.

    The secretary added that three Nigerians, including the owner of a mechanic’s garage, were attacked at Moledji, near Polokwane .

    “Their shops and houses were looted, vandalised and destroyed. The local chapter of the union has reported these attacks to the South African police, Nigerian mission and national secretariat of our union.

    “Our national secretariat is on top of the situation. As we speak, three Nigerians in the hospital are in critical condition and I do not know if they will survive because of the severity of the attack”, he said.

    Mgbo urged the Federal Government to persuade its South African counterpart to ensure the safety of Nigerians in their country.

    When contacted on phone, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Olusola Enikanolaye, said the ministry had not been briefed about the incident.

    He, however, promised to get back to NAN after inquiry from the Nigerian High Commission in South Africa.

    Similar, in February, property worth millions of dollars belonging to Nigerians, were destroyed.

    The Federal Government later sent a delegation led by Minister of Foreign Affairs Geoffry Onyeama and his Interior counterpart, retired Lt.-Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazau to South Africa for discussion on curtailment of the attacks.

     

  • Xenophobia: Attack on MTN, others not in our interest

    Xenophobia: Attack on MTN, others not in our interest

    Varied reactions have greeted the xenophobic incidence against Nigerian-owned businesses in South Africa and the reprisal attacks against MTN and other South African interests here in Nigeria. While there were strident criticisms against xenophobia in any part of the globe, the recourse to self-help in its resolution was denounced, report Simeon Ebulu and Okwy Iroegbu-Chikezie

    The xenophobic attacks in South Africa against Nigerians and their businesses and the counter attacks on MTN Nigeria  and other  South African  firms in this clime have been described as unhealthy and should be nipped in the bud.

    Stakeholders, who bared their minds on the issue, agreed that the trend should not be allowed to continue.

    The Senior Partner/Director, Africa Region Board of PKF Professional Services, an Accounting and Business Advisory firm, Tajudeen Akande, said a categorical ‘No’ to the inquisition as to whether the development was healthy, either to South Africa or Nigeria, if we decide to pay them back in their own coin.

    “No it doesn’t help,” he said, adding that it will adversely affect their economy.

    “The last time I had them send trainers here, or bring conferences here was maybe, 2003 or so. Unfortunately, South Africa is doing this, which is not going to be good for their economy. It shouldn’t happen, but unfortunately, it is happening,” he stated.

    “There was a time I proposed to have a board meeting in South Africa, I was like, can we do it through teleconference or we go to another place. Of course if I can react that way, a big investor will also react that way,” he said, pointing out that “on the diplomatic level, we shouldn’t be doing a retaliatory thing with MTN because, as he put it, “ we are beyond that. As long as we are able to demonstrate that we are beyond that, then we are in a position of strength,” he stated.

    Citing other climes, Akande said: “Look at what is in the Middle East, you see that in whatever way you see it, Britain has handled it above emotional reaction. You won’t see the kind of emotional reaction you will see from Russia or Trump’s America of today,” adding,  “we must understand that it is in their psyche. Those people the (South Africans), since they were born, they have known nothing other than struggle.”

    Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) President, Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs, who condemned the xenophobic attacks as unhelpful and unhealthy for businesses,   distanced himself from the retaliatory attacks  on  South African business interests. “I don’t think it’s the right thing,” he said, adding, you don’t pay violence with violence.” Udemba, who was a bit hesitant in responding to the issue on the ground that those affected were not manufacturers with whom he superintends, said the action of those who embarked on the reprisal attacks in Nigeria, was wrong, pointing out that the incident would affect Nigerians in the long-run. “it’s not the right thing to do, obviously it is going to affect Nigerians who work in those organisations,” if the development is allowed to fester and not checked. He said those who took part in the exercise, “were not properly advised.”

    Udemba called for a resolution of the issues through diplomatic channels by the embassies of Nigeria and South Africa.

    Also,  a real estate consultant/ Chief Executive Officer, D. L. Maurice Concern, Mr. Maurice David, told The Nation that the  retaliatory action was like using a knife to cut oneself.

    He said: “If we react against MTN, we are reacting against thousands of Nigerian families that are employed by this outfit. If we react against DSTV, we are going against the daily bread – winners of many families. If we go against Stanbic IBTC, we are sending thousands of Nigerians into the labour market thereby worsening the already bad economy of many homes.

    “ It will have an adverse effect on the nation’s economy, crime rate will soar due to the probable high number of people that will be affected and that will consequently join the unemployment market,” he stated.

    The Managing Director, Infinite Holdings Limited, Mr. Archibong Williams, a company with core interest in  renewable energy, telecommunications and safety systems engineering, said since the world has become a global village for business activities and relationships; we need each other at certain curves whether we like it or not.

    He said the people attacking fellow Africans that live in their country, “seem not to belong to the global community, otherwise they wouldn’t have embarked on the hate campaign.”

    The actions of the South African  xenophobics have clearly defined who they are, that they’re oblivious of the interconnectedness and dynamism of modern entrepreneurship.

    He said: “Embarking on retaliatory move will worsen the situation and make mess of our big brother status in the continent.  I will rather suggest a constructive political engagement and diplomacy between the two governments.”

    Also, Security Consultant and Head of Operations, APV Security Consultants, Mr. Archibong Archibong, said the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa is a disturbing trend that has come into being in recent years.

    He said the development has not augured well for businesses on both sides of the divide because it has bred distrust and suspicion among people who ordinarily should be close brothers, enjoying trade with one another and developing their economies.

    He called on both governments to take a strong stand on the matter so that it does not affect bilateral trade amongst business partners from the two countries, saying the development presently has the potential of doing so  if the trend is allowed to continue.

    Archibong said: ”I do not support reprisal attacks on South African interests because it amounts to biting your nose to spite your face. Such attacks will only result in placing some Nigerians in a position of disadvantage and suffering through the loss of their jobs as a result of these attacks.

    “There is nothing to be gained by responding to violence with violence because Nigerians are the ones who will lose at both ends of the divide,’ he added.

    South Afriacan retail giant, Shoprite Nigeria, also lent its voice in criticising the xenophobic attacks, saying it condemned any  xenophobic violence and intimidation against the citizens of other countries.

    In a statement in the wake of the attacks, Shoprite said it was highly concerned at the acts of violence against foreign nationals that sporadically flare up in South Africa and the resultant rhetoric of intolerance that is now being levelled against South Africans living in Nigeria.

    As a company with deep African roots which employs thousands of African nationals and most importantly works to bring low prices to 14 countries outside of South Africa, “we would like to see an end to xenophobia across the continent,” it said, adding, “ Shoprite appealed to the public to protect the human dignity and safety of all people living in both countries.

    “We remain committed to working with industry and the appropriate consumer groups to engage so that decisive action is taken against those involved in violent crimes and intimidation against foreign nationals as well as to convey our strong position against xenophobia,” the company stated.

     

  • NANS march against xenophobia in South Africa

    NANS march against xenophobia in South Africa

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has held rallies to condemn the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians and other Africans in South Africa. It threatened reprisals if the attacks continue, KINGSLEY AMATANWEZE and MAHMUD ABDULSALAM report.

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) is blowing hot over the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa. It has threatened reprisals, if the attacks are not stopped.

    During rallies in Abuja and Enugu State, NANS described the attacks as unwarranted.

    Hundreds of tertiary institutions in Niger State and Abuja gathered for the rally in the federal capital tagged: Madness to cure madness, against South Africa.

    The protesters condemned what they called assaults on Africans. They carried placards with inscriptions, such as “NANS against xenophobic attacks on Nigerians”, “We condemn attacks on our fellow Africans”, “We are our brothers’ keepers in Africa”, and “South Africans are bunch of ingrates”.

    The protesters led by NANS President, Aruna Kadiri, moved from the Unity Fountain to the MTN office in Maitama, and then to the Multichoice office in the Central Business District. They chanted solidarity songs, expressing their grievances to the cruelty and intolerance of South Africans against foreigners.

    The protesters marched on the South African High Commission, where they burnt South African flag. The demonstration was terminated at the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where the protesters demanded “decisive action” from the Federal Government on South Africa.

    Kadiri said: “We want to put it clear that we are annoyed by the nasty story emanating from South Africa. It is unfortunate that these acts of savagery by man to his fellow man happened in a country whose independence was fought by all Africans. Hence, we are saying enough is enough. We would not condone violent hostility towards Africans in South Africa.

    “Nigeria contributed significant resources to the freedom South Africans are enjoying today. It is surprising that the same people now humiliate Nigerians in their country. If they have forgotten so soon, let them recourse back to history and see how much Nigeria had contributed morally, logistically, forcefully and monetarily to liberate South Africa from the shackle of apartheid.”

    Responding, the Foreign Ministry spokespersons, Clement Aduku, urged the protesters to drop the idea of reprisal, saying the government did not rest on its oars in addressing the issue with its South African counterpart.

    The South African High Commissioner to Nigeria, Mr Lulu Aaron-Mnguni, regretted the attacks, promising that the culprits would be prosecuted.

    He said: ‘’The South African government share in the grief of Nigerians and other foreigners who may have suffered physical, emotional, psychological and financial trauma as a result of the xenophobic attacks. There is no denying that the incident is not only despicable but demeaning of the African race. However, I want to assure everyone that the culprits would not go unpunished. It is important that all foreign nationals in South Africa or those proposing a visit ensure that they travel with genuine documents and endeavour to respect the laws of their host country.”

    At a briefing after its rally, the Enugu State chapter of NANS urged the government to prevent recurrence of the attacks on Nigerians.

    Its Chairman, Chidi Ilogebe, said: “We are calling on the Federal Government to do the needful by bringing an end to xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa. We also call on the President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma, to protect foreigners living in his country. He needs to call his countrymen to order.”

    NANS Zonal Public Relations Officer (PRO), Victor Ezenagu, decried the attacks, saying they were signs of ingratitude to the role Nigeria played toward the freedom of South Africans.

    He said: “Nigerians don’t deserve what they are experiencing in the hands of South Africans. About three decades ago, we led a vanguard that fought apartheid in South Africa. The likes of Thabo Mbeki were given asylum in Nigeria. We saw South Africans as brothers.

    “Nothing warrants the attacks on Nigerians in South Africa. We call on the President Zuma to stop these xenophobic attacks on. South Africans shouldn’t think they have monopoly of violence. We have many of their countrymen in Nigeria and they are living in peace. We want them to reciprocate this good gesture to our patriots living in their country. They must know that respect begets respect, and violence begets violence too.”

    NANS said it is duty as pressure group to seek the protection of Nigerians in and outside the country’s border. The students urged the National Assembly, National Human Rights Commission, civil society organisations and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to expedite actions to ensuring protection for Nigerians in South Africa.

     

     

     

  • Xenophobia: Legal options for victims

    Xenophobia: Legal options for victims

    South Africa has been in the spotlight since last month, following the resurgence of xenophobic attacks on blacks, especially Nigerians there. Some Nigerians have died; homes and businesses have been lost to mobs who accused them of taking their women and jobs. Although Nigeria has criticised the South African government’s handling of the attacks, it has not said how it will help its citizens seek redress. Lawyers have identified options available to the victims. ERIC IKHILAE reports. 

    The numbers are startling. No fewer than 116 Nigerians have been murdered in South Africa in the past two years
    in xenophobic attacks, according to the Senior Special Assistant (SSA) to the President on Diaspora Affairs, Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa.

    In the first week of last month, when a fresh round of attacks on black foreigners began, Nigerians reportedly lost about five businesses and a church. In the second week, about 15 houses belonging to or rented by foreigners, especially Nigerians, were burnt by South African mobs in Rosettenville, Johannesburg.

    The South African government seems helpless to prevent the attacks, which have been occurring since 1994, but there is the perception that the perpetrators enjoy some sort of tacit support from the state and its agencies,

    Although some of the country’s leaders condemned the attacks, others rationalised the attackers’ action, claiming that criminals were the target.

    The South African High Commissioner in Nigeria, Lulu Aaron-Magnesia, also echoed this view. He said there were concerns among South Africans that a few foreigners, including Nigerians, were involved in drug peddling.

    Critics argue that these statements by South African leaders and their agents do not only fuel the culture of hate and intolerance, which xenophobia represents, but a feeling among the civilised world, that South Africa has jettisoned its constitutional provisions of the respect for rule of law and protection of the rights of non-citizens.

    They question whether South Africa has elevated barbarism to the level of state policy, where rather than explore the due process of law where an infraction is identified, people resort to mob action, a practice associated with cruelty and crudity, reminiscent of the practice in the stone age.

    Reports have it that in the recent attacks, virtually all the victims were killed by the natives, who wielded cutlasses, bricks, and knives.

    Mrs Dabiri-Erewa, during a meeting with South African High Commissioner in Nigeria, Lulu Aaron-Magnesia, said: “We have lost about 116 Nigerians in the last two years. And last year alone, about 20 were killed. This is unacceptable to the people and government of Nigeria.”

    Besides Mrs. Dabiri-Erewa, many Nigerians, including politicians, have also expressed anger about the development and queried the seeming lethargic response of the Federal Government.

    Senate Committee Chairman on Diaspora, Senator Rose Oko expressed dissatisfaction over the killings.

    She said: “We have written to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to avail us with what happened in South Africa between the police and the man. We condemn, in very strong terms, these attacks on Nigerians in South Africa.

    “You are aware that in 2016 alone, about 20 Nigerians were killed in extra-judicial manner. Before this time, several had been killed in like manner. There are several incidences of xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa.

    “These attacks came, notwithstanding the contributions Nigeria made towards the liberation of South Africa during the apartheid regime. You begin to wonder why all these attacks? The Federal Government should take harder stance against the country,” Senator Oko said.

    Also, the Chairman, House Committee on Diaspora Matters, Rita Orji, faulted the alleged lackadaisical attitude of the Federal Government to the protection of Nigerians outside the country.

    Orji, who represents Ajeromi Ifelodun Federal Constituency of Lagos State on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) platform, accused the government of over-protecting the businesses and interests of South Africa to the detriment of Nigeria.

    She noted that the Federal Government was not exhibiting sufficient interest on issues affecting Nigerians in Diaspora.

    “Are they only important to us just because they need to contribute to national development? Are we calling them ours because we needed to get hard currencies remitted by them? What about their health and their businesses, are they being protected?

    “Are they being taken care of in the treaties we are signing in this country?  Have we taken any bold step to make sure that incessant killings of Nigerians abroad unlawfully are taken care of?

    “These are pertinent questions that any Nigerian that loves life would ask. And why would this conspiracy of silence linger while blood is being shed? Nigerians are being killed like chicken in various countries and Nigerians are becoming endangered species?” she said.

    Orji, who cited murder cases of Nigerians in South Africa, Libya and others, said her committee had investigated and given reports to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but with no visible action taken so far.

     

    How it began

     

    The first main recorded xenophobic attacks were witnessed in South Africa between December 1994 and January 1995, when armed youth gangs in Alexandra Township, outside of Johannesburg, Gauteng Province, destroyed the homes and property of migrants and marched them down to the local police station where they demanded that the foreigners be immediately removed.

    These were followed by more attacks across the country in 1998, 2000, 2008, 2009, 2013, 2015, last year and this year. According to a report by the Southern African Migration Project (SAMP), despite a lack of comparable data, xenophobia in South Africa is perceived to have significantly increased after the installation of a democratic government in 1994.

    Records have it that cities, which mostly serve as flashpoints of xenophobic violence in South Africa, are those dominated by black immigrants. It was found that whenever such attacks start, black immigrants residing in white dominated areas were always safe, as the native residents hardly participate in such attacks.

    The cities identified as traditional xenophobic grounds include Gauteng, Limpopo, Western Cape, Kwazulu Natal and Free State.

     

    Causes and why it persists

     

    According to studies, xenophobia is caused mainly by social and political reasons.

    In a 2004 report, SAMP noted that to overcome the divides of the past and build new forms of social cohesion, the South African government “embarked on an aggressive and inclusive nation-building project. One unanticipated by-product of this project has been a growth in intolerance towards outsiders; violence against foreign citizens and African refugees has become increasingly common and communities are divided by hostility and suspicion”.

    Similarly, a report by Citizens for Global Solutions (CGS), titled: “The tragedy of xenophobia in South Africa”, said South Africa politicians have used this xenophobic sentiment to rise to power.

    It noted: “Many South African politicians have used politics of fear toward immigrants to attain power, making xenophobic statements during their campaigns. And, sadly, many political figures continue to do so.”

    It also found out that nationalistic feelings, hang-over of apartheid, envy, frustration, unemployment, failure of the South African police and laziness of black South Africans, among others, often fuel these attacks.

    A report by the South Africa-based Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) identified four  causes of the violence. They include: “Relative deprivation – specifically intense competition for jobs, commodities and housing; and group processes, including psychological categorisation processes that are nationalistic rather than superordinate.”

    The group also identified “South African exceptionalism, or a feeling of superiority in relation to other Africans; and exclusive citizenship, or a form of nationalism that excludes others.”

    Also, a report titled: “Towards tolerance, law and dignity: Addressing violence against foreign Nationals in South Africa” by the International Organisation for Migration found that poor service delivery or an influx of foreigners may have played a role, blaming township politics for the attacks.

    It found that community leadership was lucrative for the unemployed, and that such leaders organised the attacks.

    Observers blamed the persistence of these attacks on the failure of the South African government to act. They noted that there was no history of prosecution and conviction of past perpetrators, a development they said accounts for why xenophobia will persist in the country.

    This position is supported by the concern expressed  by a group, Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa (CORMSA), after the 2008 attack. It said foreigners remained under threat of violence and that little had been done to address the causes of the attacks.

    The organisation complained of a lack of accountability for those responsible for public violence, insufficient investigations into the instigators and the lack of a public government inquiry.

     

    Options for Nigerian victims

     

    Despite the reasons for the attacks, experts argued that the yearly recurrence of this unwarranted circle of losses reflects a failure on the part of the South African government and the inability of the continental body, the African Union, to ensure cohesion in the continent.

    They said a major path towards a solution for the continental body to impress it on South Africa and its people that they share a common fate with all other Africans.

    This, they argued, would be better appreciated when South African leaders and South Africans are consistently reminded that today’s South Africa would have been impossible without the contributions of Africans and African leadership across the continent in supporting the anti-apartheid movement.

    Lawyers, including Femi Falana (SAN), Sebatine Hon (SAN) and Dr. Umar Abubakar, argued that the South African government, under the law, was under the obligation to safeguard the lives and property of all residents in the country.

    They contended that the argument by South African leaders, that the attacks were directed at criminals, betrayed the hollowness of their intellects. They argued that it was wrong for that government to look the other way while its citizens commit crimes against residents of other countries, to who it owed the obligation of protection.

    The lawyers are of the view that remedies exist for victims of xenophobic attacks in courts, either in South Africa or outside it.

    Falana, who threatened to sue the South African government should the attack persists, urged President Zuma, in a recent letter, to urgently identify suspected perpetrators of criminal acts and xenophobic attacks against Nigerians and other Africans living in South Africa and to bring them to justice promptly.

    He urged the South African President to promote and ensure access to justice and the right to effective remedy and reparations to victims.

    Falana argued that xenophobic attacks and violence are not only human rights violations, but also criminal acts, and the South African government’s persistent failure to proactively address the problems is a serious affront to the rule of law, and amounts to breaches its international human rights obligations under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, particularly Article 12 on the right to movement.

    “Therefore, Article 12 imposes an obligation on your government to secure the rights pro­tected in the Charter to all persons including Nigerians and other Africans within your country’s jurisdiction. Such obligation is breached when victims are denied the opportunity to be heard regarding the deci­sion to expel them, either prior to or after their expulsion,” Falana said.

    He urged Zuma to address the debilitating situation by identifying and arresting the perpetrators, bringing them to justice and be committed to providing access to justice and effective remedy to victims.

    “Effectively prosecuting the perpetrators and providing reparations to victims would serve as a deterrent to future attacks. We also urge you to put measures in place to proactively protect non-nationals including Nigerians living in South Africa,” Falana said.

    Hon said the option for the victims is for the Federal Government tackle the issue diplomatically and request damages from the South African government, for the losses suffered by its citizens.

    “If these options are rejected, the victims can come together and initiate a civil action or actions against the government of South Africa in that country. Such suit can even be initiated in courts here since South Africa has an embassy here.

    “Those Nigerians, who are directly affected can sue the South African authorities. If they find it difficult to get local courts in that country to hear their case, they can approach courts outside the country for redress.

    “The law is that each government of a country, where people reside, owes it as a duty to protect the lives and property of those residents. So, if the government closes its eyes or chooses to look the other way and allow its citizens to unleash terror on foreigners, the government can be sued. Victims of such attacks can sue the government of South Africa for failing to protect them.

    “Honestly, this xenophobia of a thing, is very terrible. It shows serious level of ingratitude on the part the South African government and its people to the contributions of other African countries, particularly, Nigeria to the successful dismantling of the inhuman and barbaric apartheid regime.

    ”The question to ask the South African leaders, who seem to be comfortable with this unwarranted attacks, is whether it is only the non-South African Africans that are criminals in that country,” Hon said.

    Abubakar said the incident  in South Africa and its concentration on fellow black Africans were a reflection of the failure of governance. He wondered how South African leaders and its people could forget so soon the sacrifices of other African countries, especially Nigeria, for their country’s independence from the brutal apartheid regime.

    “From the trend of events and the reaction of the South African authorities, the xenophobic attacks on Nigerian and other nationals, it is clear that the South African government is complicit. It has failed in its international obligations to, among others, protects residents in that country.

    “In the case of the Nigerian victims, I will advise the Nigerian government to sue for damages on behalf of its citizens, who have been subjected to these unwarranted losses. Should the government refuses to act, I will encourage the victims themselves to sue either in South Africa or Nigeria.”

  • Xenophobia:  Threatened  South Africans  behind attacks,  says envoy

    Xenophobia: Threatened South Africans behind attacks, says envoy

    Nigerians residing in South Africa and black immigrants from other African countries have been at the receiving end of attacks by their hosts. Assistant Editor JIDE BABALOLA writes on the motive behind the South African xenophobic attacks. 

    Nigeria, South Africa set to raise anti-xenophobia monitors

    A  JOINTLY RUN “early warning” centre to track and deter xenophobic attacks against Nigerians living in South Africa is to be launched soon, the Federal Government and South Africa have hinted.
    The Foreign Affairs ministers of Nigeria (Geoffrey Onyeama) and his South African counterpart ( Maite Nkoana-Mashabane) met yesterday in Pretoria in a bid to diffuse soaring tensions over a recent string of attacks on migrants living in the rainbow nation.
    “The early warning centre would allow us keep each other abreast of issues and help prevent violence”, Nkoana-Mashabane was reported by AFP as saying.
    There were several incidents last month of South African locals attacking migrants from Africa and elsewhere and their businesses in both the administrative capital Pretoria and the commercial capital Johannesburg.
    Many locals have alleged that the targets were brothels and drug dens being run by migrants from all over Africa, including Nigeria.
    More than 20 shops were targeted in Atteridgeville, outside Pretoria, while residents in Rosettenville, south of Johannesburg, attacked at least 12 houses.
    The new violence-busting forum will meet every three months and will be made up of representatives from both countries and include immigration officials, business associations and civil society groups.
    Nkoana-Mashabane said it was untrue that “the attacks on foreign nationals were targeted at the Nigerians”, adding that citizens of other countries were also affected.
    Onyeama said he had received assurances that Nigerians in South Africa would be able to live in peace and called for an end to “mass attacks”.
    According to the Nigerian Union in South Africa, there are about 800,000 Nigerians in the country, many of them living in Johannesburg.
    Onyeama added that groups in Nigeria calling for the retaliatory expulsion of South African residents and businesses “do not speak on behalf of government”.
    Attacks against foreigners and foreign-run businesses have erupted regularly in recent years in South Africa, fuelled by the country’s high unemployment rate and rising poverty levels.
    In response to the violence, about 100 demonstrators gathered on February 23 outside the offices of two South African companies in Abuja – telecoms giant MTN and satellite TV provider DSTV – to protest the upsurge in attacks.
    Last month, the Federal Government urged the African Union (AU) to step in to stop “xenophobic attacks” on its citizens in South Africa, claiming that 20 Nigerians were killed last year.
    South African authorities have declined to confirm the figure which may have been the result of other criminal activity, not just anti-immigrant violence.
    A protest march against “migrant crime” was held in Pretoria on February 24 and resulted in violent clashes between crowds of young South African men and migrants from other African countries, including Nigerians and Somalis.
    President Jacob Zuma responded by condemning the wave of xenophobic unrest and called for calm and restraint. He said that migrants should not be used as a scapegoat for the country’s widespread crime problem.

    REPEATED attacks on Nigerians living and earning their meal tickets in South Africa by their hosts have put a question mark on the fortune the Federal Government invested for the liberation of South Africa in the apartheid era.
    The emancipation of African ‘brothers and sisters’ had been the centre piece of Nigeria’s foreign policy since independent in 1960. The Federal Government spent billions of dollars in Liberia, Sierra-Leone, several years after its prominent role at ending the oppressive apartheid regime in South Africa.
    Besides investing huge resources in the anti-apartheid struggle, Nigeria hosted at least two post-apartheid era South African Presidents – the late Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki. Several South African companies from South Africa have adopted Nigeria as their operational headquarters.
    But rather than show gratitude to the roles played in their country, gangs of black South Africans have always been eager to transfer aggression against Nigerian immigrants in the xenophobic rage documented across the world.
    The latest of such attacks was on February 24. The number of the casualties has not been determined. Some were killed, many maimed and others violently dispossessed of all they labored to acquire over the years. Their homes, businesses, cars and other properties were aggressively vandalised in what many described as transferred aggression by irate South Africans.
    According to reports, the police in some places looked the other way with some measure of indifference. The police in Pretoria reportedly expended stun grenades and rubber bullets to disperse the attacking arsonists.
    The word ‘xenophobia’ has its root from a combination of the Greek words – xenos, meaning “strange” or “foreigner”, and phobos, meaning “fear”. Xenophobia can manifest itself in many ways involving the relations and perceptions of an in-group towards an out-group, including the fear of losing identity, suspicion of its activities, aggression and desire to eliminate its presence to secure a presumed purity.
    Over the years in South Africa, xenophobia has attained the worst violent. Nigerians, Somalis and other African communities bear witness to this. However, such violent South African xenophobic reactions do not find expression against South African whites or any other group of white people – this offers further insight into the psychological condition of the rampaging hordes.

    Climate of fear

    On the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Nigerian-born Emeka Uhanna’s profile is one of those used to illustrate the climate of fear and other implications of xenophobia in South Africa. With all his life savings invested in a restaurant/liquor business, 47-year-old Uhanna and his South African wife earn honest living in Randburg, South Africa.
    Though the couple has no criminal record or affiliation since 1997 when they moved to Randburg, the Uhannas now live in fear of the prevailing xenophobia. They have also expressed concern for their two children, aged 16 and 14.
    Uhanna said: “My wife is worried about what future our children will have if the xenophobic attacks become the norm. We don’t know how to explain the hatred against Nigerians to our families, to our children. This is the third round of attacks against foreigners; one was in 2008 where people were killed, again in 2015.
    “I now get calls from home; my family members wanting to know if we’re safe; they see the stories in the news. I do feel safe, I feel safe because I live in the suburbs away from where the unrest and violence has been happening, but I don’t know if I could say that if I was living in a poorer area.
    “There are parts of this city that are no-man’s land; where the police have no control over what happens and where there are no consequences for wrong-doing. That unfortunately is where the xenophobia has thrived.
    “There is just lawlessness from all sides; by all nationalities and that sort of environment is a time-bomb. Life is different in the suburbs but I do worry about my fellow Africans who become victims of these incidents. They have nothing to do with crime.
    “I love this country, I consider it my home and it breaks my heart to see what is happening. The government needs to seriously address the concerns people are raising – both South Africans and foreigners,” Uhanna said.

    Hateful stereotypes

    In the 1960s, Nelson Mandela lived in Nigeria and Thabo Mbeki spent was in Nigeria in the 1970s. Many South African citizens passed through federal tertiary institutions not only in the country but on Federal Government scholarships.  In those days, South Africans, who actively participated in the struggle against apartheid, saw in Nigeria a bastion of hope.
    But overtime, a growing population of mostly unemployed and largely envious bands of black South Africans, see Nigerians and other hardworking immigrants as people who rob them of ‘opportunities’.
    In his book, “Struggle with no borders: Capitalism, nationalism and xenophobia in South Africa”, Dale T. McKinley, alleges that “African state has constructed and fed the idea and practice of xenophobia. At its conceptual heart, xenophobia is a fear of the ‘other’, with the ‘other’ most often being defined by differential (contemporary) nation-state ‘membership’.
    To some extent, leaders at different levels of the African society incite aggression, hate and xenophobia and sometimes, they inspire violence and bloody conflicts.
    According to Antonio Tabucchi, “Xenophobia manifests itself, especially against civilisations and cultures that are weak because they lack economic resources, means of subsistence or land. So, nomadic people are the first targets of this kind of aggression.” This comes close to the observation of Robin May Schott in “Feminist Interpretations of Immanuel Kant” where she stated that “Xenophobia is a fear of individuals who look or behave differently than those one is accustomed to.”
    Basically, simple but hateful perpetuation of stereotypes helps to drive aggression. In social psychology, a stereotype is a thought that can be adopted about specific types of individuals or certain ways of doing things. These thoughts or beliefs may or may not accurately reflect reality.
    Wikipedia explains further: “Stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination are understood as related but different concepts. Stereotypes are regarded as the most cognitive component and often occur without conscious awareness, whereas prejudice is the affective component of stereotyping and discrimination is one of the behavioral components of prejudicial reactions.
    “In this tripartite view of intergroup attitudes, stereotypes reflect expectations and beliefs about the characteristics of members of groups perceived as different from one’s own, prejudice represents the emotional response, and discrimination refers to actions.”

    Transferred aggression

    Ben Ephson, the Managing Editor of Daily Dispatch newspaper in Ghana thinks that xenophobic attacks occur because Black South Africans are “lazy” and “jealous” of the wealth that foreigners make in their country, thereby making such foreigners in places like Johannesburg and Pretoria to lock themselves up in their homes – unable to go about their normal business activities.
    “Essentially, when people are poor, they feel frustrated and they want to vent their anger on innocent people,” he stated as he explained reasons he thinks they are frustrated as a result of their poverty caused by their own lazy attitude towards work.
    “You live in a community with people who have come there looking for opportunities. They work maybe 18 or 20 hours a day and you see them buying things and shipping it home or the guy has gone to buy a motorbike or has gotten a second-hand vehicle he or she is using and you begin to think: ‘I live here (but) I don’t have these things, why should they have it?’ forgetting that you are being lazy.
    “Maybe you are not prepared to take 200 Rand an hour. You are asking for 400 Rand an hour and he (the foreigner) coming there knowing what he or she wants to do is taking 200 Rand. So, they (South Africans) decide to go on a looting spree. Something needs to spark them to do this and it’s more of poverty, need and jealousy, he added.”
    A Nigerian immigrant asserted that he and his fellow Nigerians have been working hard in South African.
    The Nigerian who pleaded for anonymity said: “People here are saying that Nigerians are bringing in drugs and promoting prostitution. But can I tell you something, while I don’t condone crime, Nigerians are not the only ones involved in crime here.
    “It’s all too easy to profile one group and that is not right. It’s also dangerous and puts people’s lives in danger; it’s important for South Africans to know that not all of us are criminals, the same way not all South Africans are engaged in crime.”
    In an online publication quoting a study by The Economist, www.thesouthafrican.com states that as a matter of fact, many South Africans are lazy. It referred to a data compiled by The Economist, using information from the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the European Journal of Public Health. Painting South Africans as being among the laziest in the world, the data states that nearly 50 per cent of South African adults have “sedentary” lifestyles while the global average is 23 per cent. South Africa was also ranked as the fifth most inactive country in the world, behind Colombia, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Malaysia.”
    Despite efforts by the government, many South Africans lack access to housing, water, land and other essentials of life but President Zuma who rejects any suggestion of South Africans being xenophobic has had cause to describe his people as lazy lots.
    In a March 25, 2015 report, South Africa’s The Citizen newspaper, in a report titled: “Zuma slams lazy South Africans” quoted President Zuma as saying that his people are lazy and that dictatorial fiat may be needed to effect a change of attitude.
    “Our people are waiting for the government. Our people are not used to standing up and doing things. These ones (foreigners) are not expecting any government to do anything, so they get here, see opportunities and exploit them”, the paper stated.
    The South African High Commissioner to Nigeria Lulu Mnguni traced the attacks by South Africans on their guests to the belief that their means of livelihood was under threat.
    President Jacob Zuma has condemned the attacks and warned that he would not condone the situation. Mnguni also assured that his country does not hate but feels threatened somewhat.
    The envoy said: “The root cause can be viewed more as social challenges that exist when some people find out that their businesses are being threatened. When we were growing up, we had businesses that were run by our own people but now they feel that outsiders have taken over.”

    In search of truce

    Apparently tired of living in fear, Nigerians in South Africa urged the Federal Government to diplomatically address their challenges.
    The row that ensued between the Senate and the House of Representatives over which of the chambers should raise a fact-finding team to South Africa was laid to rest with the withdrawal of the Red Chamber.  Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu announced the Senate concession.
    According to the list announced on the floor of the House by Deputy Speaker Lasun Yusuff, the delegation to South Africa would be led by House Leader Femi Gbajabiamila. In the team are: Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Nnena Okeje (PDP, Abia); Sadiq Ibrahim (APC, Adamawa); Henry Nwawuba (PDP, Imo); Nasiru Daura (APC, Katsina) and Shehu Musa (APC, Bauchi.
    The House resolved that its delegation and officials of the Foreign Affairs Ministry should engage the parliament of South Africa and Nigerians in South Africa on the xenophobic attacks with a few to stopping such attacks and preventing any future occurrence.
    Not a few Nigerians condemned the attacks on Nigerians by their South African hosts.
    Lagos-based lawyer Femi Falana wrote to President Jacob Zuma, threatening to take a legal action against South Africa at the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights should the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians continue.
    In his letter, the rights’ crusade and Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) urged the South African authorities to identify perpetrators of the attacks, prosecute them and ensure compensation for victims of the attacks.
    Falana noted that since 2008, xenophobic violence and other criminal acts had continued across South Africa, claiming lives, leaving countless victims injured and robbing them of their property.
    The letter reads: “We are writing to request you to use your leadership position to urgently identify suspected perpetrators of criminal acts and xenophobic attacks against Nigerians and other Africans living in South Africa and to bring them to justice promptly.
    “We also urge you to promote and ensure access to justice and the right to effective remedy and reparations to victims. We believe that it is the failure of your government to bring perpetrators to justice and protect the victims of the xenophobic attacks that has resulted in a vicious cycle of attacks and impunity.
    “These xenophobic attacks and violence are not only human rights violations but also criminal acts, and the persistent failure to proactively address the problems is a serious affront to the rule of law, and directly breaches your government’s international human rights obligations including under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, particularly Article 12 on the right to movement.”
    Many believe the masterminds of the February 24 attacks would be fished out and sanctioned to serve as a deterrent and to forestall such attacks.

  • Xenophobia: Nigeria, South Africa set up early warning unit

    Xenophobia: Nigeria, South Africa set up early warning unit

    The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Geoffrey Onyema, said on Monday that Nigeria and South Africa have agreed to set up an early warning unit to check future xenophobic attacks.

    Onyema, who is leading a Federal Government delegation to that country, disclosed this to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on a telephone from Pretoria, South Africa.

    The minister said the early warning unit would comprise representatives of the South African Ministry of Foreign Affairs,  Home Affairs, police, immigration, representatives of Nigerian High Commission, consulate  and Nigeria Union.

    “ They will meet every three months and that will be a framework within which the Nigeria Union in South Africa will be able to engage on a permanent basis with the main high-level government officials of this country.

    “ We believe that it will enable them in sharing intelligence, information and being proactive to prevent this kind of thing ever happening again, he said.

    Onyema said the delegation had positive discussions with the South African Foreign Affairs Ministry and  Home Affairs Ministry on how to protect Nigerians and their property.

    He said the meeting agreed to set up the early warning unit to dialogue quarterly to prevent such incident.

    The President of Nigeria Union, Mr Ikechukwu Anyene, said Nigerians in South Africa appreciated the delegation’s  visit.

    “ The spirit of our people here has been lifted. The mood has changed and our people are happy,” he said.

    Anyene said the early warning unit set up by the two governments was a positive development because the union would be in a position to interact with top government officials regularly.

    “ On our part, we will advance social cohesion between Nigerians and South Africans,” he said.

    The delegation visited business premises and homes of Nigerians attacked during the xenophobic incidents in  February.

    [news_box style=”2″ display=”tag” link_target=”_blank” tag=”Xenophobia” count=”8″ show_more=”on”]

  • Xenophobia: Falana threatens to sue South Africa

    Xenophobia: Falana threatens to sue South Africa

    Lagos lawyer and activist Femi Falana  has asked  South African President Jacob Zuma to identify perpetrators of criminal acts and xenophobic attacks against Nigerians and other Africans living in South Africa and bring them to justice.

    The request was contained in a letter yesterday, titled: “Request to identify perpetrators of xenophobic attacks against Nigerians, bring them to justice and provide adequate compensation to victims”.

    Falana urged Zuma to promote and ensure access to justice and the right to effective remedy and reparations to victims.

    He said he would sue the South African government if it failed to stop the xenophobic attacks as requested.

    “Take notice that if the xenophobic attacks continue, we shall be compelled to sue your government.

    “Since 2008, the xenophobic violence and other criminal acts have continued to occur across South Africa claiming lives, displacing tens of thousands of people and leaving countless victims injured and robbing them of their property.

    “Although some arrests have reportedly been made, many perpetrators are yet to be brought to justice while the victims continue to be denied access to justice and their internationally recognised right to effective remedy and reparations.

    “We believe that it is the failure of your government to bring perpetrators to justice and protect the victims that has resulted in a vicious cycle of attacks and impunity.

    “These xenophobic attacks and violence are not only human rights violations but also criminal acts, and the  failure to address the problems is a serious affront to the rule of law and directly breaches your government’s international human rights obligations.”

    The lawyer, therefore, said the South African government should identify and arrest perpetrators and bringing them to justice and publicly provide access to justice and effective remedy to victims.

    Falana urged Zuma to put measures in place to protect non-nationals, including Nigerians, living in South Africa.

    He argued that the prosecution of perpetrators and provision of reparations to victims would prevent future attacks.

  • Xenophobia and reciprocity  

    It was the inimitable, iconic Nelson Mandela who once expressed profound disappointment with how Nigeria had turned out while berating its political leaders on the corruption scourge that became our country in the post-independence years. If he were alive today, Mandela would congratulate the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari on the way it is currently confronting the fatal scourge head on. But sadly, if the fiery General Murtala Mohammed and his urbane, charismatic External Affairs Minister General Joseph Garba, were alive, they would be bitterly disappointed with the way the current generation of South Africans have turned on their Nigerian counterparts who are in their country as part of the global practice of labour and capital migration. There is no reason whatsoever to defend the aggressive and crude attacks on young migrant Nigerians who are in South Africa to genuinely and legally make a living.

    For historical reasons, the relationship between Nigeria and South Africa ought to be better than it is now, whether at interpersonal level or government to government level. In the fight against apartheid, the Nigerian government stuck out its neck in bold defiance of Western and superpower interests to back the ANC, offering both moral and financial support for the African National Congress. Time and space will not allow me to chronicle details of how the Nigerian government assisted the peoples of South Africa in the fight against the obnoxious apartheid policy of the white minority government.

    In recognition of the vibrant role of Nigeria, this country was named a ‘Frontline State’ in spite of the geographical distance between the two countries. In grateful appreciation, when Mandela was finally released, one of the first African countries he visited was Nigeria. And we gave him a heroic reception too. During this epoch, the fate of every South African was vigorously defended by every Nigerian government. In the same spirit, the Nigerian government gave scholarships to a good number of South Africans to study in Nigerian universities. In their time of distress, we provided a strong shoulder for both Government and Citizen.

    Fast-forward to some twenty-five odd years after the abolition of apartheid and the emergence of a black-governed South Africa. On two different occasions, Nigerians have become victims and targets of xenophobic attacks by frustrated South African youths. They accuse Nigerians of taking their jobs and their economy, of taking their women (not overtly stated). In a very barbaric manner, many hapless Nigerians were violently and physically abused; some lost their precious lives. Their businesses were destroyed. This happened in a country which has an efficient police and security system, rated as one of the best in Africa.

    The point must be made that any Nigerian who runs afoul of the law in any country should be brought to justice within the provisions of the extant laws in the host country. In that spirit, some Nigerians have been deported and others sent to serve jail terms or sent to the gallows as it has happened in Indonesia. However, no Nigerian should be persecuted because of a successful business enterprise in any part of the world. It is my humble view that the host nation has the obligation to protect the lives of all migrants in its space. Also, the Nigerian government is obliged to vigorously defend the rights and lives of Nigerians anywhere in the world. If our citizens rights and lives are violated anywhere and we cry like withered old women, that country would not feel obliged to live up to its obligations.

    Some analysts have also blamed Nigerians for being too ‘loud and bossy’ when they are outside the shores of the country. There is nothing we can do about it. Nor is there anything we can do about South African girls falling in love with the spare cash of the Nigerian boys who reside there. Their men should compete. The South African government should be encouraged to bring the average young South African into the economic life of that rich country. Too many of them live outside the comfort of the beauty of South Africa. Cape Town, for example, remains a white man’s territory. I shuddered when I first encountered those shanties in the outskirts of Cape Town. The wealth of South Africa is still controlled by the white minority in spite of the abolition of apartheid. This is not the fault of Nigerians or other black migrant labourers!

    Some people have made the asinine argument that here at home the Nigerian government does not respect life and so has no right to complain when others violate the lives of its citizens abroad. I beg to disagree. The image of the country is involved. The lives of Nigerians are at stake. In our view of the cosmos based on our understanding of intergroup and personal relations, ‘beat my child does not mean you should kill my child’. Chinua Achebe tells us, in the words of our elders, ‘that you must first chase away the fox before you ask the hen not to wander into the forest’.

    No matter how prosperous a country is, a percentage of its citizens could prefer to live abroad. There are Americans living in the United Kingdom or Germany; there are some who have made Nigeria their home. The Diaspora has been home to many successful Lebanese businessmen, including home here in Nigeria. Migration is a way of life and it is protected by international conventions. To assert that if Nigeria were stable and prosperous, its youths would not migrate. That is not correct. The level of migration from Nigeria, indeed from Africa generally, is frightening. But it is not enough reason to persecute our citizens like the proverbial orphan in foreign countries.

    In my view the Nigerian government should send a strong signal to the South African government that the life of every Nigerian living in South Africa is sacrosanct. If the South African government cannot guarantee the lives of Nigerians and looks the other way when lives are violated, we ought to as a nation sanction South African business concerns here in Nigeria. Some have argued that the MTNs and the DSTVs of this world have Nigerian investments as well and that any sanction against such big businesses would only hurt Nigerians working for the multinationals. The then British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher (Iron Lady) vigorously opposed sanctions against the apartheid regime for years with the same argument. When Murtala Mohammed nationalised Shell BP, a very strong message was sent to the British government and what followed is now history. Indeed, if the Nigerian government targets the Southern Suns, the MTNs and the DSTVs, the big business names in South Africa would run to their government for the appropriate actions to be taken. A clear example was when MTN was slammed with a huge fine when it was found in violation of the laws of the land! The mood of the ordinary citizen is one of reciprocity in diplomatic parlance. And our popularly-elected, people-oriented government should please listen to the cries of the citizens!

     

    • Professor Eghagha is Head of English Department, University of Lagos