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Nigeria-south Africa Relations: Beyond Rivalry To Stronger Ties by Theben(m): 11:55am On Dec 18, 2013
Nigeria and South Africa’s relations date back to decades ago, with Nigeria topping the list of foremost supporters of Black South African liberation movements, including the African National Congress.

During the period, the Nigerian government issued more than 300 passports to South Africans seeking to travel abroad.

Few years after the apartheid in South Africa, what seemed like a very close relationship gradually turned into rivalry, with Nigerians suffering xenophobic attacks, a development that has been described by Nigerians as a ‘stab in the back’.

As at 2011 over 24,000 Nigerians were living in South Africa. Increasing competition between the two countries for positions at multilateral organisations is also thought to have worsened relations.

There have been conflicting interests between both countries, as it relates to politics in Africa. One of which was seen during the crisis that erupted in Cote d’Ivoire after the election. While South Africa supported incumbent Laurent Gbagbo to continue in office, Nigeria was in favour of Alassane Ouattara to take over as president.

However, beyond the seeming rivalry between both countries, the President of Nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan was in South Africa in May 2013 in a major visit that drew attention away from any rivalry to focus on Africa.

During the visit, Jonathan urged African leaders to pay greater attention to the economic emancipation of the people as a way of consolidating the achievements recorded in the liberation of the continent.

He said that Nigeria and South Africa were not in competition but are brothers striving for the greater good of the continent.

Channels Television had a chat with South Africa’s High commissioner to Nigeria, Ambassador Lulu Mngunu, about the ties that bind both countries and how to make it stronger.

Ambassador Mngunu described Nigeria as “a country that is hinged on the philosophy of Pan-Africanism, as expounded by Kwame Nkrumah, Julius Nyerere and many other leaders who always believe that Africa cannot be free if it had in it some countries that are not free”. The philosophy, he said, entails the struggle towards integrating and becoming one to enable the continent overcome its challenges whether political or economic.

He pointed out that the South African foreign policy is based on the consolidation of the African Agenda.

Beyond Xenophobic Attacks And Rivalry “Our interests as South Africans are inextricably bound with those of the African continent. South Africa cannot make it alone. This was proved during the struggle. I am sure even now we will be in the trenches if we were to fight it alone. Thanks to our friends and our brothers from Nigeria,” Ambassador Mngunu said.

The friendly relationship seen during apartheid has been taunted with the increasing xenophobic attacks Nigerians in South Africa are experiencing.

However, Ambassador Mngunu, insisted that ‘xenophobia was not part of South Africa’s foreign policy’. “We have our own law to punish anybody that harasses or engages negatively on the people… whether South Africans, Namibians or Nigerians. We are educating our people that we have come a long way with these
people. We have shared trenches fighting against apartheid and we are now sharing trenches to bring about peace in Africa,” He said. To bring an end to these attacks, he emphasised that the South African government has set up a programme aimed at educating South Africans on the nation’s foreign policies, as it relates to migrants.

Beyond the attack and rivalry, the ambassador pointed out several areas that both countries are exploring to ensure they benefit from each other and strengthen ties. One of which is the mining sector; an area South Africa has over 100 years’ experience in.

The ambassador also explained the issues surrounding the issuance of South African Visa, which Nigerians have complained was becoming difficult to obtain.

Source:www.channelstv.com/home/2013/11/12/nigeria-south-africa-relations-beyond-rivalry-to-stronger-ties/
Re: Nigeria-south Africa Relations: Beyond Rivalry To Stronger Ties by Theben(m): 12:16pm On Dec 18, 2013
Act One: The Prophet and the Pariah, 1960– 1993

The annus mirabilis of African independence in 1960 saw the birth of Nigeria amid great hopes that a political and economic giant could take its preordained place in the African sun. In the same year, South Africa was about to be expelled from the Commonwealth for the killing of 69 unarmed blacks in Sharpeville. South Africa’s foreign policy, like Nigeria’s, was paradoxically suffused with a missionary zeal. While Nigeria advocated economic development, apartheid’s leaders
talked patronisingly about their country having special responsibilities to spread Western values north of the Limpopo. In the three decades that followed, both countries failed to achieve their leadership aspirations for very different reasons.

In the case of Nigeria, its attempts at seeking greater political influence in West Africa through economic means were frustrated by France, which encouraged francophone states to create rival trade blocs.

South Africa, by contrast, dominated the Southern African Customs Union and established, alongside Botswana, Swaziland, and Lesotho, the common market that eluded West Africa. But since South Africa was diplomatically isolated and forced to bear the brunt of international sanctions, Nigeria was the prophet, South Africa the pariah.

Nigeria attended meetings of the Frontline States of Southern Africa, chaired the United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid, and hosted a UN antiapartheid conference. After Nelson Mandela’s release from jail in 1990, he visited Nigeria to express his gratitude, and received a $10 million campaign contribution for the African National Congress. There were great expectations that these developments would mark the birth of a strong alliance between Africa’s two economic powerhouses.

Act Two: King Baabu and the Avuncular Saint, 1994–1998

These hopes were soon dashed by the unexpected souring of relations between Abuja and Tshwane (Pretoria). It is important to understand the two protagonists in the second act of this drama: General Sani Abacha and Nelson Mandela. In his 2002 play King Baabu, Nigerian Nobel literature laureate, Wole Soyinka, depicted Baabu as a brutish and corrupt general who exchanges his military attire for a monarchichal robe. The play is a thinly disguised satire of General Abacha’s debauched rule between 1993 and his death in 1998. In power, Abacha was ruthless and reclusive, but hardly as inept as the caricature depicted by Soyinka and Nigeria’s political opposition, who greatly underestimated him. Abacha proved to be a political survivor who understood how to control Nigeria’s army and buy off the country’s political class.

Nelson Mandela is the starkest contrast one can imagine to Abacha. An educated, middle-class lawyer and a cosmopolitan anglophile, this Nobel Peace laureate spent 27 years as a political prisoner and embodied his people’s aspirations for a democratic future. Under Abacha’s autocratic rule, it was Nigeria, and not South Africa, that was now facing mounting criticism over its human rights record.

Having abandoned its apartheid past, South Africa was widely acknowledged to be the most likely political and economic success story in Africa. The nadir of relations between the countries was reached after the hanging by the Abacha regime of Nigerian environmental activist Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight of his fellow Ogoni campaigners, during the Commonwealth summit in New Zealand in November 1995.

Mandela believed he had received personal assurances from Abacha of clemency for the ‘Ogoni nine’ Feeling deeply betrayed, he called for oil sanctions against Abacha’s regime and Nigeria’s expulsion from the Commonwealth. Even Mandela’s status, however, failed to rally regional support against Nigeria. It took a deus ex machina event – Abacha’s sudden death in 1998 – to transform this tale of the prophet and the pariah into a tale of two prophets.

Act Three: The Philosopher-King and the Soldier-Farmer, 1999–2008

Thabo Mbeki and Olusegun Obasanjo assumed the presidencies of their countries in 1999. Mbeki, a Sussex University-trained economist, often wrote his own speeches, fancied himself as a philosopherking who developed the idea of an ‘African Renaissance’, and was widely celebrated as the intellectual father of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development.

Obasanjo, a career soldier and engineer, established one of Africa’s largest farms in his hometown of Ota upon retirement as military head of state in 1979, before returning as civilian leader 20 years later.
Re: Nigeria-south Africa Relations: Beyond Rivalry To Stronger Ties by Theben(m): 12:30pm On Dec 18, 2013
From his first-hand experience as head of the ANC office in Lagos, Mbeki developed much respect for Nigeria’s sense of fierce independence. Both he and Obasanjo worked closely at managing African conflicts and promoting norms of democratic government through the African Union. Bilateral trade increased during this period, with Nigeria becoming South Africa’s largest trading partner in Africa, a relationship now worth $3.6 billion a year.

Nigerians, however, complained of predatory behaviour by South African companies, accusing them of profiting from the Nigerian market – three times larger than South Africa’s – while refusing to open up their own.

There were also strains in bilateral relations which were addressed by eight binational commission meetings between 1999 and 2000. Annoyed at the difficulties experienced by Nigerians in obtaining visas to South Africa, Abuja imposed stricter visa requirements of its own on South Africans.

Nigerian diplomats complained about reports of their compatriots as drug-traffickers and criminals in the South African press.

Act Four: The Era of the Khalifas, 2009-2012

Khalifa is the term used in northern Nigeria for kings -in-waiting. Two such khalifas – both former deputy presidents – are now presidents of Nigeria and South Africa: Goodluck Jonathan and Jacob Zuma. Both have been accused of weak, indecisive leadership. After the election of Zuma as South Africa’s president in …††„, Tshwane co-operated closely with Angola, having identified it as its key strategic ally. This created tensions with Nigeria by appearing to downgrade the ‘special relationship’ between the two countries. The fact that South Africa is the only African representative in the Group of 20 and BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) groupings has exacerbated this. There were further disagreements over differing approaches to tackling the conflicts in Côte d’Ivoire and Libya in 2011. During the post-election crisis in Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria adopted a belligerent stance towards Laurent Gbagbo, who refused to stand down after losing elections. South Africa provocatively sent a warship to the Gulf of Guinea in Nigeria’s traditional West African sphere of influence.

Libya revived diplomatic rivalry. Though both countries voted in the UN Security Council to support the intervention, Nigeria became one of the first African countries to recognise the country’s National
Transitional Council. South Africa delayed recognition of the NTC and accused Nato of abusing its mandate in Libya. These damaging disagreements together with the tit-for-tat deportations of each others citizens in March in a row over fake vaccination cards highlight the importance of Abuja and Tshwane re-establishing a common strategic approach if Africa’s voice is to carry weight on the global stage.

Encouragingly, the first meeting of the binational commission in four years took place in May, with both sides agreeing to relax visa requirements. They also agreed to strengthen African regional bodies in the areas of peace, democracy and development. Let’s hope, in the words of the Bard, that all’s well that ends well.

Dr Adekeye Adebajo is executive director of the Centre for Conflict Resolution, Cape Town, and author of The Curse of Berlin: Africa After the Cold War; and UN
Peacekeeping in Africa.
Re: Nigeria-south Africa Relations: Beyond Rivalry To Stronger Ties by Theben(m): 12:43pm On Dec 18, 2013
http://m.allafrica.com/stories/201208020446.html/?maneref=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com%2Fm%3Fq%3DAct%2BOne%253A%2BThe%2BProphet%2Band%2Bthe%2BPariah%252C%2B1960%25E2%2580%2593%2B1993%2BThe%2Bannus%2Bmirabilis%2Bof%2BAfrican%2Bindependence%2Bin%2B1960%2Bsaw%2Bthe%2Bbirth%2Bof%2B%26client%3Dms-opera-mini%26channel%3Dnew
Re: Nigeria-south Africa Relations: Beyond Rivalry To Stronger Ties by mickyarams: 1:22pm On Dec 18, 2013
Nice piece
Re: Nigeria-south Africa Relations: Beyond Rivalry To Stronger Ties by SLIDEwaxie(m): 2:02pm On Dec 18, 2013
Pictures or it didn't happen grin grin

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