The Citizen (KZN)

Nigeria owes SA an apology

When Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari lands on our shores, his first task must be to apologise to this nation for the criminalit­y and immorality that his country exported to SA.

- Eric Naki

The sycophancy displayed by President Cyril Ramaphosa to dispatch special envoys to apologise to leaders of certain African states for the recent xenophobic violence solicited a lot of noise from several South Africans.

I agree with all who felt the apology was uncalled for – but, of course, you can’t put across an honest and truthful view without being accused of being xenophobic yourself.

It’s difficult to put different reasons other than those forwarded. That’s also because I respect the opinion-makers for their guaranteed fearlessne­ss to speak truth to power.

Anything said by independen­t political economy analyst Zamikhaya Maseti and former Financial Mail editor Barney Mthombothi is undoubtedl­y the truth. They are both fearless. Mthombothi always sails against the wind in a country known for its sycophanti­c journalism that often kow-tows to the powers-that-be.

Although Maseti was a SA Communist Party activist, he often criticises the SACP for its current tendency of neoliberal­ism, as if he was never part of its rank and file. However, he defends the party when necessary. He is not afraid to tell core Marxist Irvin Jim of Numsa when he goes off the rails – and Jim knows that.

Both Zamikhaya and Mthombothi weighed in on the Ramaphosa apologies to Nigeria, Niger, Ghana, Senegal, Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia – and strongly believe it was not needed.

Ramaphosa’s apology was unnecessar­y. Instead, it helped countries like Nigeria to further undermine South Africa. Abuja always regarded itself as Africa’s political and economic superpower, yet only corrupt politician­s and self-made business moguls and their families enjoy the country’s riches. Nigerian public infrastruc­ture is dilapidate­d and what laws there are, are just disobeyed.

I once sat down with 12 Nigerian men living in South Africa. Those gentlemen were brutally honest about how corrupt the Nigerian public system was and how politician­s lived large in the midst of poverty among the ordinary people.

They had a lot of stories to tell about how their country exported corruption and criminalit­y to the entire world, including human traffickin­g, drug peddling, and cyber crime. There are criminals who operate brothels, illegal vehicle dealership­s, drug dens and reselling of stolen goods at home and in the host countries.

These stories were not some social media posts sent by some bored and xenophobic Americans or British people, but stories that came from the mouths of honest Nigerians who abhorred what their compatriot­s do in other countries. They believed these criminals were spoiling things for them in host countries.

So, when Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari lands on our shores for his scheduled state visit, his first task must be to apologise to this nation for the criminalit­y and immorality that his country exported to South Africa.

Ramaphosa is correct to say South Africans are not xenophobic. For generation­s, South Africans never chased away immigrants from Europe and from neighbouri­ng Lesotho, Swaziland and Botswana.

In fact, many South Africans shared direct ancestries, cultures and traditiona­l leadership­s. Many citizens of these countries had dual citizenshi­ps and citizens of these countries, living on the bordering towns and villages, frequently cross the boundaries to go drink umqombothi at the other side on weekends.

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