Connect with us

Africa News

Yet Another Nigerian Killed in South Africa

Published

on

at

Listen to article
0:00 / 0:00

The recent Killing of another Nigerian, Mr Martin Ebuzoeme by unknown assailant in South Africa has won the concern of the Nigerian community in the country yet again.

Mr Adetola Olubola, The President of the Nigerian Union in South Africa, while confirming the news to newsmen in Abuja on Sunday, disclosed that the victim was killed in Yeoville, Johannesburg around 7:30pm on July 12.

This unfortunate incident is coming barely 24 hours after South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa visited Nigeria.

Ramaphosa had during his visit on July 11 said that the killing of Nigerians and other foreign nationals in the country was an act of criminality, not specifically targeted at Nigerians.

“The killings are caused by high level of unemployment among the youth as well as other social factors emanating from long apartheid misrule.

“Government is however, doing all best possible to bring it down,” Ramaphosa had said.

Mr Godwin Adama, the Nigeria Consul General in Johannesburg disclosed that the latest killing has nothing to do with xenophobic attacks.

Adama told the NAN on phone from Johannesburg that the killing happened in a crime invested area of the country.

“The man was killed by unknown gunmen and has nothing to do with xenophobic.

The place is a crime prone area and those kind of assassinations happened often in that area.

“There is no investigation that showed that it was xenophobic.

“Within a year here, we have about 16,000 murders which do not necessarily have anything to do with any national of a particular country,” he said.

Naija News understands that the killing of Nigerians in South Africa had been on the increase in recent times.

Before the latest one, there was the assassination of Mr Ozumba Tochukwu-Lawrence, by an unknown gunman at 10 Koppe, Middleburg, Mpumalanga, South Africa, on July 6.

Another Nigerian, ThankGod Okoro, was also reportedly shot dead in Hamburg, Florida West Rand, Johannesburg, on April 9 by the South African Police Flying Squad.

The continues killings of Nigerians in South Africa had instigated a number of protests there.

For demanding justice on behalf of their fallen compatriots, 14 of the protesters were taken into custody and branded drug peddlers.



Joshua Oyenigbehin is an introvert who is passionate about Storytelling, writing and teaching. He sees his imagination as an unsearchable world, more magical than a fairyland. He has written a novel and working on another.