ABUJA — The Federal Government will seek compensation for Nigerian nationals who suffered harm during the xenophobic crisis in South Africa, Nigeria’s envoy confirmed on Tuesday. Channels Television reported the announcement alongside news that the third batch of evacuated Nigerians had arrived in Lagos following weeks of anti-immigration protests and violence in South Africa.
The envoy said Nigeria is pursuing the compensation claim through diplomatic channels and will explore all available legal and bilateral frameworks to ensure that Nigerians who lost property, businesses, or suffered physical harm during the crisis receive appropriate redress. The specific mechanism and timeline for the compensation pursuit were not detailed in initial reports.
The third batch of returnees arrived at Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos on Tuesday. Officials from the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission and the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs were at the airport to receive and process the returning citizens. The government said it will continue operating evacuation flights as long as Nigerians in South Africa request assistance.
A Growing Bilateral Tension
Nigeria’s pursuit of compensation for xenophobia victims marks an escalation in the country’s diplomatic posture toward South Africa. Previous xenophobic incidents have typically resulted in protests, recalls of ambassadors, and strongly worded communiques without formal compensation demands. Seeking compensation signals a harder line that reflects growing domestic political pressure on the government to defend its citizens abroad more forcefully.
South Africa’s government has not yet formally responded to the compensation announcement. Its officials have maintained that South Africa does not endorse xenophobia and that the country’s laws protect all residents equally. However, civil society in both countries has documented repeated failures to prosecute perpetrators of xenophobic violence, a gap that makes diplomatic redress more politically fraught.
What Returnees Face
For many of the Nigerians returning from South Africa, the evacuation ends years of effort to build lives and businesses abroad. Resettlement support from the government will be critical to helping them rebuild. The NIDCOM has said it is coordinating with state governments to provide returning Nigerians with access to skills acquisition, business support, and psychosocial services.
Discover more from News247 Nigeria
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
