Former president Olusegun Obasanjo has once again, put pen to paper in the wake of escalating xenophobic attacks by South Africans against other nationals living in their country. He said there's no justification for these attacks, and that it does not guarantee South Africans would achieve what they are agitating for.
In his letter to the Leader of South-Africa’s Inkatha Freedom Party, Mangosuthu Buthelezi, Obasanjo as reported by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), added South Africa stands to lose should it continue to see fellow Africans as enemies.
“Xenophobia will make investment in South Africa more difficult, which will lead to lack of job creation and loss of existing jobs,” Obasanjo said in condemning the recent xenophobic attack against Nigerians in South-Africa.
Obasanjo noted that Nigerians had played great roles in the liberation of different peoples in different parts of Africa, including fighting against the apartheid regime in South Africa.
The former president condemned what he described as “incompetence or collusion” on the part of South African Police for standing aloof watching miscreants and criminals committing crimes against fellow human beings in the country.
“We believe that Africans living in any other part of Africa must be treated as brothers and friends.
He advised South African government to send emissaries to the countries concerned to explain, apologise and agree on the way forward for mutual understanding, accommodation, reconciliation to promote brotherhood in Africa.
“In the final analysis, if South- Africa fails to initiate appropriate and satisfactory steps to deal with the issues to pacify affected victims and work for reconciliation, the countries concerned should come together to table appropriate motions at the African Union level first and consider other measures if the situation is allowed to continue,” he said.
He said that most migrants did not migrate to other countries with total emptiness, adding that some had education, skills, experience, expertise, entrepreneurship which could help economies of host countries.
“In any case, all of us in the world are migrants, no matter where we live, depending only on how far back you want to go,” he said.