The National Association of
Polytechnic Students (NAPS) on Friday, March 11 staged a peaceful protest in
Ibadan against the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa.
The students in their
hundreds went round the metropolis to demonstrate against what they called
inhuman treatment of Nigerians and other Africans in South Africa.
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 said 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.

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