…Urges Nigeria, others to report at AU
Tunji Bosun, Abeokuta
Former
President, Olusegun Obasanjo has urged the African countries, whose
citizens were affected by xenophobic attacks in South Africa to report
to the African Union.
Obasanjo also advised the affected
countries include Nigeria to take other measures if the first option did
not yield the desired results.
Obasanjo stated this on Monday in
his latest letter written to the founder of the Inkatha Freedom Party,
in South Africa, Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi.
The former
president said he wanted the affected African countries to table
appropriate motions at the African Union as a first option and consider
other measures if the situation continues unabated.
Obasanjo, who
described xenophobic attacks on foreigners by South Africans as a
great disservice to Africa, called for urgent reconciliation between the
xenophobic countries and South Africa.
He said, “For any
African country to encourage or allow or not seriously sanction
xenophobia against Africans in their country is a great disservice not
only to the country where xenophobia takes place and the countries of
the victims concerned, but also a great disservice to the whole of
Africa and black race.
“At this juncture, there is need for
fence-mending, reconciliation and wound-binding between South Africa and
the countries whose citizens have been victims of xenophobia and
afrophobia in South Africa.
“As a suggestion, South Africa should
send emissaries to the countries concerned to explain, apologise and
agree on the way forward for mutual understanding, accommodation,
reconciliation, and binding the wound to promote unity, concord, and
brotherhood in Africa.
“Repatriation of Nigerians from South
Africa is obviously not a permanent solution. At best it is palliative.
But the hurt will still remain for some time. Neither is revenge a
desirable solution. Mutual understanding and acknowledgement of what
needs to be done on all sides is imperative and getting down to doing
them is the solution that will serve Nigeria and South Africa and indeed
Africa well particularly in this era of Africa Continental Free Trade
Area opportunities.
“Nigeria and South Africa must stand together
to champion African cause and to jointly shepherd African development,
unity, cooperation, security, and progress to make the 21st century
Africa’s century”.
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