Nigerians
living in South Africa are counting their losses to the on-going xenophobic
attacks in the former apartheid enclave. The
losses, according to Nigerian Consul-General in South Africa, Ambassador Uche
Ajulu-Okeke, include: looted shops, razed ware points, two torched mechanic
workshops, 11 burnt cars and two stolen cars.
According
to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Ambassador Ajulu-Okeke yesterday put the
value of the losses in the neighbourhood of 1.2 million Rand (about N21
million).
She
told NAN by phone from Johannesburg, the South African capital, Nigeria was
keeping records of the attacks on its citizens.
“Nigerians
have compiled damage to their property and it is totalling about 1.2 million
Rand or N21 million, which will be sent to the Federal Government for further
action,’’ she was quoted as saying.
The
President of the Nigerian Union in South Africa, Mr. Ikechukwu Anyene,
confirmed that efforts were being made by the association in collaboration with
the Nigerian Mission to resettle those affected.
He
said Nigerians living in Jeppes, a town near Johannesburg, were mostly affected
by the attacks.
Ikechukwu
said: “We met about 300 Nigerians in Jeppes town, near Johannesburg, who fled
for their safety and about 50 of them do not have any place to stay.
“We
are making arrangements with the Nigerian mission in South Africa to get them a
place to stay for their safety.
“The
Nigerian union has also presented relief materials to those affected by the
attacks and we are in touch with various branch chapters of the union in the
provinces on their safety and security.”
The
envoy said that in Durban, two of the three Nigerians who were wounded during
the attacks had been treated and discharged from the hospital.
The
consul-general promised to return to Durban to assess the situation and meet
with the provincial authority on security of Nigerians in that Province.
Her
words: “The Nigerian mission in South Africa is on top of the situation. We are
working hard to protect Nigerians in South Africa.
“Though,
the task has not been easy, we are trying our best. In one of the hot spots at
Jeppe, near Johannesburg, the mission assisted about 50 stranded Nigerians to
re-settle.
“I
have also visited the site of the attacks in Johannesburg to assess the damage
and it was enormous.”
She
assured that the Nigerian mission would meet with all Nigerian Union chapters
in the nine provinces of South Africa to find strategies on how to check the
attacks.
“I
am bringing all Nigerians together so that we work out a vigilance and alert
mechanism; they will also tell me what their challenges and issues are,” she
said.
Nigerians
living in South Africa are counting their losses to the on-going xenophobic
attacks in the former apartheid enclave.
The
losses, according to Nigerian Consul-General in South Africa, Ambassador Uche
Ajulu-Okeke, include: looted shops, razed ware points, two torched mechanic
workshops, 11 burnt cars and two stolen cars.
According
to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Ambassador Ajulu-Okeke yesterday put the
value of the losses in the neighbourhood of 1.2 million Rand (about N21
million).
She
told NAN by phone from Johannesburg, the South African capital, Nigeria was
keeping records of the attacks on its citizens.
“Nigerians
have compiled damage to their property and it is totalling about 1.2 million
Rand or N21 million, which will be sent to the Federal Government for further
action,’’ she was quoted as saying.
The
President of the Nigerian Union in South Africa, Mr. Ikechukwu Anyene,
confirmed that efforts were being made by the association in collaboration with
the Nigerian Mission to resettle those affected.
He
said Nigerians living in Jeppes, a town near Johannesburg, were mostly affected
by the attacks.
Ikechukwu
said: “We met about 300 Nigerians in Jeppes town, near Johannesburg, who fled
for their safety and about 50 of them do not have any place to stay.
“We
are making arrangements with the Nigerian mission in South Africa to get them a
place to stay for their safety.
“The
Nigerian union has also presented relief materials to those affected by the
attacks and we are in touch with various branch chapters of the union in the
provinces on their safety and security.”
The
envoy said that in Durban, two of the three Nigerians who were wounded during
the attacks had been treated and discharged from the hospital.
The
consul-general promised to return to Durban to assess the situation and meet
with the provincial authority on security of Nigerians in that Province.
Her
words: “The Nigerian mission in South Africa is on top of the situation. We are
working hard to protect Nigerians in South Africa.
“Though,
the task has not been easy, we are trying our best. In one of the hot spots at
Jeppe, near Johannesburg, the mission assisted about 50 stranded Nigerians to
re-settle.
“I
have also visited the site of the attacks in Johannesburg to assess the damage
and it was enormous.”
She
assured that the Nigerian mission would meet with all Nigerian Union chapters
in the nine provinces of South Africa to find strategies on how to check the
attacks.
“I
am bringing all Nigerians together so that we work out a vigilance and alert
mechanism; they will also tell me what their challenges and issues are,” she
said.
Mrs. Ajulu-Okeke said the mission and the
Nigerian Union had been working cordially to meet the challenges caused by the
xenophobic attacks on Nigerians.
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