CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

South Africa, Nigeria trade barbs over attacks on migrants

Published: 26 Apr 2015 - 09:13 pm | Last Updated: 14 Jan 2022 - 05:33 pm


Johannesburg - The South African government reacted angrily Sunday to Nigeria's decision to recall its ambassador from Pretoria over a wave of mob attacks on African migrants that killed at least seven people.

"We are not sure which actions or behaviour of the South African Government the Nigerian Government is protesting," the South African foreign ministry said in a statement.

"If this action is based on the incidents of attacks on foreign nationals in some parts of our country, it would be curious for a sisterly country to want to exploit such a painful episode for whatever agenda," the ministry said, lamenting Nigeria's "unfortunate and regrettable step."

Taking aim at its rival for economic and political dominance in Africa, Pretoria said it had held off blaming Nigeria's government when 84 South Africans were killed in the collapse of a church building in Lagos last year.

South Africa had also refrained from blaming Nigerian authorities for the "more than nine months delay" in the repatriation of the bodies "or for the fact that when these bodies eventually returned, they were in a state that they could not be touched or viewed as required by our burial practice."

The testy statement from Pretoria comes a day after Nigeria announced it was recalling its ambassador in Pretoria for consultations over "the on-going xenophobia" in the country.

South African President Jacob Zuma deployed troops last week to quell the violence in Johannesburg and the port city of Durban, which forced thousands of people from their homes over the past few weeks.

No deadly attacks have been reported in the past week.

AFP