Protests were held outside the consulate and at the South
African High Commission in Lagos and Abuja.
South African consul general in Nigeria, Sam Monaisa, said
in an email to the South African business forum in that country that the
closure would remain in force until Thursday.
The situation in Durban had calmed down, but he was
concerned about the Nigerians that were being repatriated, he wrote.
He said Nigerians were using social media to blow an already
tense situation in South Africa out of proportion and stoking emotions.
This was why Nigerians maintained that their compatriots
were being killed daily in South Africa, he said.
South Africans becoming targets
He warned the forum’s members to stay alert and not move
around unnecessarily. South African businesses and citizens became targets of
threats and acts of retaliation whenever xenophobic attacks occurred in South
Africa, he cautioned.
Meanwhile, in Zimbabwe 15 people who were part of a first
group of Zimbabweans returning home in the wake of xenophobic attacks in Durban
have “disappeared” in Musina, state media reported on Tuesday.
The Herald newspaper said in an online update: “Fifteen
victims disappeared in Musina where they reportedly claimed feeling safe
because there were no xenophobic attacks reported.” There were no further
details.
Zimbabwe is repatriating up to 2000 of its citizens who have
asked to be evacuated in the wake of the attacks.
The first six buses carrying 407 Zimbabweans left Durban on
Sunday.
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