Nigerians in South Africa have called on the federal government to take concrete steps to protect their lives and businesses in the country.
The President of Nigerian Citizens Association in South Africa (NICASA), Rev Frank Onyekwelu, made the call in a statement on Sunday 26 April.
“There is currently a growing anti-foreigner protest across South Africa, where demonstrators have targeted foreign-owned shops while calling for the expulsion of non-nationals,” he said.
According to him, NICASA expressed deep concern and unequivocal condemnation of the rising wave of hate, xenophobic aggression, targeted harassment, and reported instances of police brutality against Nigerian citizens and other African nationals residing in South Africa.
“We are alarmed by the increasing normalisation of hostility, manifested through inflammatory rhetoric by certain political actors, unlawful intimidation, and discriminatory enforcement practices by some law enforcement personnel.
“These actions not only undermine human dignity but also threaten the long-standing bonds of African solidarity” Onyekwelu said,
The group demanded an immediate high-level diplomatic engagement with South African authorities to ensure the protection of lives, businesses, and Nigerians’ rights.
It also called for a transparent mechanism for reporting, documenting, and addressing cases of abuse, harassment, and xenophobic violence.
In addition, the Nigerian group demanded clear accountability for any law enforcement officers found culpable in acts of brutality or discrimination. Besides, it wants public reassurance from the Nigerian government, affirming its commitment to the safety and welfare of its citizens globally.
While noting that xenophobia is a direct contradiction of the vision of continental integration and shared prosperity, NICASA called for a united continental response through the African Union and regional blocs.
A statement earlier on Friday 24 April by the spokesperson for the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM), Abdur-Rahman Balogun asked Nigerians in South Africa to shut their businesses and stay safe.
He said the advisory followed a circular from the Nigerian consulate-general in Johannesburg on Wednesday 22 April.
According to the commission, protests in East London, Cape Town, Durban, and KwaZulu-Natal have turned violent, leading to looting, destruction of property, and injuries.
NiDCOM said intelligence from the consulate indicates that fresh protests are planned in Gauteng province between April 27 and 29, with demonstrators seeking to pressure the South African government over the presence of foreign nationals.
NiDCOM also urged Nigerian business owners to close their shops on April 27, marked as Freedom Day, and consider remaining closed on April 28 and 29, noting that foreign-owned businesses are often targeted during unrest.
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However, many Nigerians have taken to social media to condemn the federal government’s lack of concrete action to protect its citizens in South Africa, adding that asking Nigerians to hide indoors was not the solution to the issue.
When contacted, Kimiebi Imomotimi Ebienfa, the spokesperson of Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the government was still waiting for an update from its missions in Pretoria and Johannesburg.
Also reacting to the incident, a former President of the United Nations Human Rights Council, Ambassador Martin Ihoeghian Uhomoibhi, condemned the xenophobic attacks in South Africa, calling on the Nigerian government to act more decisively.
Ambassador Uhomoibhi, who also served as Permanent Secretary of the Nigerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said, “The Federal Government should take strict action.
“You cannot go to sleep when you are being publicly attacked. Nigeria should act and act very simply and promptly.”
He rejected the idea that Nigerians should leave South Africa for peace to reign, adding, “That is not the solution. You [Nigeria] should take diplomatic action.”
“The game of diplomacy is reciprocity. You slap me, I slap you back. In diplomacy. If you keep quiet, you portray yourself as a sleepy dog or something or a nobody.”
A former Nigerian ambassador to Sudan, Côte d’Ivoire and Angola, Suleiman Dahiru, has said Nigeria’s response to recurring xenophobic attacks in South Africa remains largely constrained to diplomacy, insisting that Abuja has little room for coercive action.
Speaking in a telephone interview with our Correspondent Dahiru, argued that while the attacks are “totally misplaced,” the responsibility for ending them rests squarely with the South African authorities.
“Nigeria has engaged South Africa on so many occasions. This is a diplomatic issue, and it is being handled diplomatically,” he said.
He dismissed suggestions that foreign nationals, including Nigerians, are responsible for job losses in South Africa, describing such claims as unfounded.
“They are not working for any state government in South Africa. They are not working for any local government. So, to blame them for taking away jobs that should normally go to them is totally wrong,” he said.
According to him, African migrants operate mostly in private businesses and should not be scapegoated. “Nobody has stopped South African blacks from doing what other Africans are doing. Let them set up their own businesses and get their own people to patronise them,” he added.
However, the former envoy cautioned that migrants must also reflect on their conduct.
Dahiru noted that perceptions of illegitimate wealth among some migrants could be fuelling resentment. “If they are looking very rich but not showing why, the conclusion is that they may be doing illegal things… and this becomes annoying or repulsive to the South Africans,” he said.
Despite these concerns, Dahiru maintained that the bulk of responsibility lies with the South African government, which he accused of not doing enough public education.
“It would appear to me as if the South African government has not done enough to get their nationals to accept that other Africans can come and set up legitimate businesses,” he said.
