Daily Dispatch

Outrage over Nigerian’s death

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NIGERIA has urged “urgent” diplomatic action after one of its citizens died in a violent confrontat­ion with South African police, in what they called a “barbaric” and “extrajudic­ial” killing.

The incident involves Nigerian man Victor Tochukwu Nnadi, who was allegedly choked as he lay handcuffed on a main street on Thursday.

Photos and film footage taken by witnesses show a prone body with a swollen face and blood coming from his mouth.

“The barbaric behaviour of the perpetrato­rs is not only unacceptab­le, but also calls for urgent attention by diplomatic authoritie­s in Nigeria and South Africa,” said Abike Dabiri-Erewa, a senior aide to the president on foreign affairs and the Nigerian diaspora.

“While appealing to Nigerians to avoid crimes, the extra-judicial killing of Nigerians is … unacceptab­le,” she said.

South African police said Nnadi had resisted arrest on suspicion of drug dealing and died after swallowing a dose of heroin that he was trying to sell.

A group representi­ng expatriate­s, the Nigerian Union in South Africa (Nusa), complained there had been no examinatio­n to confirm he had died of heroin.

South African police say they are investigat­ing further.

“The accused is innocent until proven guilty,” Nusa spokesman Emeka Ezinteje Collins told reporters.

Nnadi’s brother, who tried to prevent the arrest, was himself detained and remains incarcerat­ed.

According to Nusa there are around 800 000 Nigerians in South Africa, many of them living in Johannesbu­rg.

The community was badly hit by a wave of xenophobic violence in April 2015 that, according to an official toll, left seven people dead and thousands homeless.

In its latest report, an independen­t watchdog said 640 people had died from police brutality or in police custody in South Africa. — AFP

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