Should we start counting how many
South Africans have died in South
Africa at the hands of Nigerians
This is the question posed by Home
Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba in
response to a question about the
figure of 116 Nigerians said to have
been killed in South Africa in the past
two years.
This week a senior Nigerian
presidential aide on foreign affairs,
Abike Dabiri-Erewa, said 20 Nigerians
were killed last year alone and called
on the African Union to intervene in
what Dabira-Erewa was quoted as
saying were "killings in South Africa".
But Gigaba said this was the discussion
South Africa would not want to get
into as it would turn ugly.
"I am not privy to the figures from the
Nigerian government and how they
collected them. I do not think it is the
discussion we want to get into. It will
turn out very bad.
"Should we start counting how many
South Africans have died in South
Africa at the hands of Nigerian
nationals?" the minister asked in Cape
Town yesterday.
Gigaba said countries should desist
from pointing fingers at each other.
Gigaba hits out at officials who ‘incite’
violence in communities
"It is something we need to discourage
strongly because we heighten the
situation rather than lessen it," he
said.
Gigaba said he had requested a
meeting with African Union
ambassadors today to discuss recent
incidents of attacks on foreigners in
South Africa.
Gigaba said on a visit to Rosettenville,
in Johannesburg, where residents went
on rampage burning houses believed
to be brothels and drug dens, that
people were clear that they were not
targeting foreigners or Nigerian
immigrants.
He said the residents were targeting
immigrants involved in crime.
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