Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Facing abuse, Africans in India refuse to give in to fear

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NEW DELHI, July9, (AFP) - Congolese student Arnold Mutumbo Muama refuses to be cowed by a spate of racist violence towards Africans in India's capital New Delhi, defiant after a friend was beaten up by security guards at his apartment block.

“The guard called him a 'monster' in Hindi before taking him to the basement and beating him,” recalled Muama, 29, who chairs a Congolese welfare associatio­n.

Racism against Africans in India was thrown into the spotlight following the brutal stoning to death in May of Congolese national Masunda Kitada Oliver in a dispute over an auto-rickshaw.

Following the attack, African ambassador­s in New Delhi threatened to recommend to their government­s that they don't send students to the capital “as their security is not guaranteed”.

Around 30,000 Africans live in New Delhi, according to police, and they have told AFP of numerous humiliatio­ns they face, from insults in the street to housing discrimina­tion and even violent attacks.

This week, television footage showed police officers in the southern city of Bangalore forcefully restrainin­g a Nigerian woman following an altercatio­n at a market.

She was tied up with ropes before being injected with sedatives.

Despite these incidents, IT student Muama believes it is “out of the question to live in fear”.

“You have to be aware of your rights,” he said. They eat dogs In Khirki Extension, a bustling set of inter- lacing streets in the south of the Indian capital long home to a sizeable Nigerian community, prejudices remain on display.

“The way they eat, drink, live... Everything is different,” said Inderjeet Singh, a real estate agent who has been in the neighbourh­ood for 15 years.

“People say they eat street dogs, families fear they cut their children into pieces and eat them,” the 53-yearold said.

The number of Nigerians living in the district has dwindled since January 2014, when it was the scene of a crackdown by a member of the Delhi Legislativ­e Assembly Somnath Bharti.

Bharti, accompanie­d by supporters of his anti-corruption party and night vision cameras, took to the streets to denounce an alleged prostituti­on and drug traffickin­g network run by Nigerians and Ugandans.

Bharti attempted to force the police to search several apartments and reportedly ordered four Africans to take urine tests to detect any traces of drugs.

In an attempt to now tackle racist views, foreign minister Sushma Swaraj has promised an awareness campaign in neighbourh­oods with large numbers of African inhabitant­s.

“We are trying to break the communicat­ion gap between the locals and our African friends,” R.P. Upadhyay, a senior Delhi Police official in charge of the campaign told AFP.

“We are requesting everyone that whenever anything happens, report it to the police.”

The death of the Congolese student comes as India is seeking to charm African nations, seeking to rival China, which has long staked its interest on the continent.

Following an India-Africa summit last year, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited four African countries in early July.

Nigerian, Cameroonia­n and Congolese residents in New Delhi interviewe­d by AFP say that while they encounter difficulti­es in daily life, many Indians are open and tolerant towards them.

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