The government has now confirmed what the community already knew. Two Nigerians are dead. And the diplomatic fallout is deepening.
Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has officially confirmed that two Nigerian nationals were killed in South Africa on June 28, 2026, two days before an unofficial deadline set by anti-immigrant protesters for foreigners to leave the country. One of the men was allegedly killed by South African police officers. The other was killed by unidentified attackers. Both deaths were confirmed in official government statements and picked up by international news agencies including AP News.
The Circumstances of the Deaths
The two killings occurred as xenophobic tensions in South Africa reached their most acute point in recent years. Anti-immigrant groups had set June 30 as an informal deadline for foreign nationals to vacate South African communities, creating a climate of fear and intimidation that preceded the deaths of the two Nigerians.
One victim, a Nigerian businessman identified in earlier community reports as Big Joe, was shot outside his shop in Mpumalanga Province. The second death involved alleged police involvement, a detail that adds a particularly disturbing institutional dimension to what is already a serious human rights situation.
Nigeria’s Diplomatic Response
The Federal Government has recalled Nigeria’s ambassador to South Africa for consultations, a standard diplomatic signal of serious concern that stops short of a formal suspension of relations. Nigeria has demanded a thorough investigation into both deaths, with particular attention to the allegation involving South African police officers.
Acting High Commissioner Alexander Ajayi has confirmed that the government is also pursuing a formal compensation claim for businesses and properties abandoned by the thousands of Nigerians who chose to leave voluntarily. Furthermore, Nigeria has stated that evacuation flights will continue for all Nigerians who wish to return home regardless of the June 30 deadline having passed.
The Bigger Bilateral Relationship
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has publicly condemned xenophobic violence and called for calm. However, Nigerian officials and community leaders argue that condemnations without accountability are insufficient given the recurring nature of these incidents over more than a decade.
The two confirmed deaths mark a new low point in a bilateral relationship that has economic, diplomatic, and cultural dimensions far beyond the current crisis. Nigeria is South Africa’s largest trading partner on the continent. How both governments navigate this moment will have consequences that extend well beyond the immediate tragedy.
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