Under siege in Nigeria, South African businesses shut stores

A man walks past damaged shops after overnight unrest and looting in Johannesburg, South Africa, Sept. 3, 2019. "Xenophobic rhetoric leads to xenophobic behavior," South African Jesuits warned after the violence. (CNS photo/Marius Bosch, Reuters) See SOUTH-AFRICA-JESUITS-XENOPHOBIA Sept. 3, 2019.
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South African companies MTN and Shoprite closed stores in Nigeria on Wednesday after attacks on their facilities in the country.

UJA: South African companies MTN and Shoprite closed stores in Nigeria on Wednesday after attacks on their facilities in the country.

The facilities were attacked in retaliation after days of riots in South Africa chiefly targeting foreign-owned, including Nigerian, businesses. Advertisement

The Nigerian division of telecom operator MTN said it will shut all stores and service centres in the country until further notice.

“The safety and security of our customers, staff and partners is our primary concern,” MTN Nigeria said in a statement. “MTN condemns any acts of violence, prejudice and xenophobia.”

Nigeria is MTN’s biggest market, with 58 million users in 2018 and accounts for a third of the South African group’s core profit.

Supermarket chain Shoprite said several stores in South Africa, Nigeria and Zambia were closed and extensive damage had been done to several supermarkets over the past 24 hours. Advertisement

“The retailer is highly concerned about the acts of xenophobic violence against foreign nationals,” the grocer added in its statement.

The latest wave of unrest in South Africa has raised fears of a recurrence of violence in 2015 aimed at foreigners and in which at least seven people were killed. Before that, some 60 people were killed in a wave of unrest around the country in 2008.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said on Tuesday he was urgently sending a special envoy to meet with President Cyril Ramaphosa to secure the “safety of (Nigerian citizens’) lives and property”.

Police have yet to pinpoint what triggered the violence, which began on Sunday when protesters armed with makeshift weapons roamed the streets of Pretoria’s business district, pelting shops with rocks and petrol bombs and running off with goods.

(Reporting by Chijioke Ohuocha in Abuja and Nqobile Dludla in Johannesburg; Writing by Paul Carsten; Editing by Louise Heavens and Deepa Babington) Source: Reuters
Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/business/under-siege-in-nigeria–south-african-businesses-shut-stores-11872652

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