A 42-year-old Nigerian automobile
mechanic lost N240.650million (R10m) to
the xenophobic attack on his workshop in
South Africa last weekend.
Mr. Simon Adeoye told the News Agency
of Nigeria (NAN) on telephone from
Pretoria, South Africa, that he got a call
on the day of the incident that his
workshop had been set ablaze and
rushed to the place.
“By the time I got there, 29 cars of
different make, some Nigerian passports,
documents of the workshop, money and
other personal effects had been
destroyed by fire.
“I was helpless and could not do
anything,” he said.
Adeoye said some of the cars belonged to
South Africans; others were being
repaired for sale.
“I appeal to the Federal Government to
assist me get back to business. Officials of
the Nigerian mission have visited the
workshop to do an assessment and we
are yet to hear from them,” he said.
According to him, the mission should
replace the passports gutted by fire to
enable affected Nigerians have
documents.
Adeoye said officials of Nigeria Union
visited and commiserated with him on the
incident.
“At the moment, I have lost everything I
have. I need urgent help to re-start my
business. This will also assist me pay my
workers who have families to cater for,”
he said.
The police said at least 20 shops, possibly
belonging to immigrants, were looted in
South Africa’s capital overnight, but they
could not confirm if the attacks had
deliberately targeted foreigners.
Anti-immigrant violence has flared
sporadically in South Africa against a
background of near-record
unemployment, with foreigners being
accused of taking jobs from locals and
getting involved in crime.
Responding to similar incidents in
Pretoria at the weekend, Nigeria’s
foreign ministry said it would summon
South Africa’s envoy to raise its concerns
over “xenophobic attacks” on Nigerians,
other Africans and Pakistanis.
South African police said they did not yet
know the motive for the latest attacks,
and no deaths had been reported.
Police spokeswoman Brig. Mathapelo
Peters said: “There are allegations that
these shops belong to foreign nationals.
“It is alleged that the community
members are saying that these shops
were used for drug dealing but that is
unconfirmed.
“We will only be able to start a formal
investigation once the shop owners come
forward.”
The Atteridgeville neighbourhood, where
the looting took place, was calm on
Tuesday as police cars drove through the
streets.
An unemployed man in his mid-twenties,
who declined to be named, said: “We are
sick and tired of foreigners who are
coming to sell drugs and kill our people;
we can’t let the community go down like
this.”
South Africa, with a population of about
50 million, is home to an estimated five
million immigrants.
In April 2015, Nigeria recalled its top
diplomat in South Africa to discuss anti-
immigrant attacks which killed at least
seven people and sent hundreds of
foreigners fleeing to safety camps, as
authorities sent in soldiers to quell unrest
in Johannesburg and Durban.
In 2008, at least 67 people were killed in
anti-immigrant violence, with thousands
of people fleeing to refugee camps.
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