Santa Fe New Mexican

Driven from South Africa by hatred

Anti-immigrant vitriol has forced out hundreds of Nigerians and many others from countries around the continent

- By Julie Turkewitz

LAGOS, Nigeria — They fled mob attacks and the torching of their stores and arrived with nothing but their children and their suitcases. More than 300 Nigerians landed in Lagos on a flight from Johannesbu­rg late Wednesday because their old lives — as immigrants living in South Africa — had become untenable.

They arrived after dark, descended from the plane and lined up at the door of a yellow transit center, eyes glassy with fatigue. Sign here, officials told them. Wait there. They had little money and almost no plans.

Hatred of foreigners, they said, had long been a problem in South Africa, and it is what finally drove them out.

“If I had stayed,” said Socarvin Onuoha, a Nigerian who owned a cellphone shop for more than a decade, “I would have died.”

Africans from around the continent have emigrated to South Africa for years, expecting to find a land of opportunit­y, a place to raise their families. Now many are fleeing, carrying the painful realizatio­n that the country they once thought would deliver their dreams had instead turned nightmaris­h.

Hostility had been building for at least a decade, with many South Africans blaming foreigners for their country’s economic ills, sometimes accusing immigrants of taking jobs and housing. Nigerians have said they experience­d particular prejudice, often stereotype­d as drug dealers and thieves.

That animus burst into violence this month when people in and around Johannesbu­rg began looting and burning foreign-owned shops. The attacks killed at least 12 people and prompted a diplomatic rift between South Africa and Nigeria, threatenin­g relations between the continent’s largest economies.

In an attempt to make amends, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa sent an envoy to Nigeria this week. The envoy delivered “sincerest apologies” for the attacks and promised that the perpetrato­rs would be prosecuted. But the Nigerian government has gone ahead and begun airlifting its citizens out of South Africa, arranging flights for anyone who wants to leave, with the help of a private airline. The first plane arrived last week, carrying almost 200 people; the second, with 314, arrived late Wednesday.

Onuoha, 55, said he fled his cellphone store when it was attacked by an angry mob this month. He decided to abandon his business, his car and his furnished home and return to Nigeria. On Wednesday, he sat on a hard blue bench inside an airport building, surrounded by other returnees, including his children, 17 and 18.

The teenagers spoke English with a South African accent. Onuoha had 50 rand in his pocket, about $3. “I don’t know where I’m going to sleep tonight,” he said.

When the flight landed, the first person to make it to the door of the transit center was Patience Ndukwu, in a pink print dress, accompanie­d by four children, ages 6 to 14, one wearing a T-shirt that read “Rise to the challenge.”

Ndukwu was told to write her name at the top of a spreadshee­t, and then she was shuttled along to the cellphone center, where she was given a Nigerian SIM card, and next to the imaging corner, where someone took her picture against a white backdrop, and then to more desks, where she filled out more paperwork. Someone handed her meals in Tupperware, a phone number to help with a business loan and an envelope with a few days’ worth of cash, courtesy of various Nigerian government entities.

When she finally sat down on one of the benches, her eyes darted about. It was very loud. Some of her bags had spilled open. She had no idea what was next.

Ndukwu had moved to South Africa in 2007, she said, following her husband, also a Nigerian. She had started a restaurant, but when the attacks began, business died off.

“Everything went, just fast, fast, fast,” she said. She attributed the attacks to “jealousies” that had festered in South Africa for years.

Not far away, Pentecost Ikechukwu, 33, stood with his wife Sandra, 29. They’d had two children in South Africa: Favor, now 3, and Gracious, almost 2. Ikechukwu is from the Nigerian state of Imo and left his home “dreaming of getting a better life.” But a few weeks ago, the shop where he had found a job was set on fire and, Ikechukwu said, his boss ended up in a coma.

The boss had yet to wake up, he said, and Ikechukwu left with $7.

“If I could do my life again, I would never have stepped foot in that country,” he said. “It’s a destiny killer. It destroyed me.”

Nigerians — along with people from countries like Somalia and Zimbabwe — have moved to South Africa for years in search of work and education. Nigeria has an unemployme­nt and underemplo­yment rate of more than 40 percent, according to national data.

South Africa is still struggling with the legacies of colonialis­m and apartheid and has its own economic problems. Many poor South Africans have not found real change since the end of apartheid. Anti-immigrant sentiment has become common.

Government critics have blamed politician­s for stoking these prejudices to deflect responsibi­lity for the country’s problems.

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