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How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera - Fashion - Nairaland

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How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by God1000(op): 2:27pm On Sep 17, 2024
After Chidimma Adetshina suffered xenophobic abuse online, young Nigerians say they feel unwelcome living in South Africa.

Johannesburg, South Africa – Anita Odunyao Solarin, a 21-year-old Nigerian who has spent her entire life in South Africa, finds it safer not to disclose her West African roots.

She does her best to assimilate with her peers and rarely volunteers her origins. This, she says, shields her from persistent bullying – a phenomenon she’s faced since childhood after moving to South Africa as a baby.

“I try not to show where I am from or look Nigerian. I hide my identity socially,” Solarin told Al Jazeera. “Because I’ve had to do it for so long, it has become normal.”

Her earliest memories of the tensions between South Africans and Nigerians date back to kindergarten, where she was mistreated by a peer.

It was disheartening. A child, just four years old, hated me even though we were in the same school, looked the same, and did the same things,” Solarin shared.

“My school life was tough because I was bullied for my background. I was called names, especially the derogatory term, makwerekwere [a local slur for foreigner]. South Africans have this idea that if you’re not one of them, you don’t deserve to be here,” she added, her frustration still palpable.

Solarin was brought up in Pretoria, but she doesn’t feel like she belongs in South Africa. Even decades on, she says it’s still easier for her – and other young Nigerians – not to disclose their heritage.

Not many Nigerian children here will say ‘I am Nigerian’ because they are scared of the backlash and the hate. It’s just not safe for them,” she said.

South Africa has a long history of simmering anti-foreigner sentiment, and social tensions directed at other Black Africans in the country have turned violent over the years.

However, it’s recent events that have deepened Solarin’s disappointment with South Africa when, last month, 23-year-old beauty queen Chidimma Adetshina faced such severe xenophobic harassment as a finalist in the Miss South Africa (Miss SA) pageant that she eventually exited the competition.

Many insisted she had no right to represent South Africa in the competition.

When the controversy around Adetshina began, Solarin said she raised the matter for discussion with some of her international relations professors at the University of Pretoria, but was largely ignored. Her peers, on the other hand, tried to justify their belief that Adetshina should be disqualified based on unfounded rumours that her father may have been linked to criminality.

“[Adetshina] was bullied online because her father was Nigerian. If it had been any other nationality, there wouldn’t have been a problem,” Solarin said. “People even said her father was a drug dealer. Where does that come from? It’s the assumption that all Nigerians are criminals – it’s annoying.”

For weeks, Adetshina endured trolling and abuse, with the online vitriol amplifying existing South African-Nigerian tensions that are fuelled by economic frustrations and stereotypes about foreigners.

South Africa suffers from widespread unemployment and sluggish economic growth.

While the government does little to improve the situation, many find it easier to turn on migrant African communities, accusing them of taking jobs and increasing criminality. These tensions inevitably spill into social media debates, where xenophobic rhetoric soars.

Adetshina’s situation came to a head when a video went viral of her celebrating her Miss SA qualification with her father, who was dressed in traditional Nigerian attire. The backlash was swift and relentless.

South Africa’s Minister of Sports, Arts, and Culture, Gayton McKenzie – known for his xenophobic rhetoric – only added fuel to the fire.

We truly cannot have Nigerians compete in our Miss SA competition. I wanna get all the facts before I comment, but it gives funny vibes already,” McKenzie posted on social media.

This statement set off a barrage of online abuse, escalating into manifest threats – despite the fact that Adetshina was born in South Africa and therefore qualified to compete.

The South African Department of Home Affairs launched a formal investigation. Minister of Home Affairs Leon Schreiber alleged that Adetshina’s mother had committed identity theft when registering her as a South African citizen.

While the government admitted Adetshina had committed no crime, her mother – who claims South African and Mozambican descent – became the subject of a criminal investigation. Both women denied any wrongdoing, but the pressure eventually forced Adetshina to withdraw from the Miss SA pageant.

“I have made the difficult decision to withdraw from the competition for the safety and well-being of my family and me,” she announced on Instagram in August, days before the Miss SA final.

The abuse had become too much to bear, leading her to quit social media platform and limit her Instagram engagement. Adetshina later went on to compete in and win the Miss Universe Nigeria contest, representing her father’s homeland on the basis that she carries dual citizenship.

In interviews, Adetshina shared how the ordeal left her questioning whether she would ever return to South Africa. The emotional scars were so deep that she admitted she would seek therapy to cope.

Disappointed in South Africa’

For Solarin, Adetshina’s withdrawal was disheartening.

“I was very disappointed in South Africa,” she said, her voice filled with regret. Solarin, who dreams of one day becoming a public figure in the political arena, hopes to educate people about the consequences of the social tensions between South Africans and Nigerians.

However, “I don’t see a future for myself in South Africa”, she confessed.

Solarin’s mother, Doris Ikeri-Solarin, who is the head of the civic group Nigerian Union South Africa, says Adetshina was unfairly targeted by anti-Nigerian sentiment.

“This young lady was born, raised, and educated in South Africa. Whatever happened before she was born, she had no control over it. She grew up with the ambition of becoming a beauty queen, and suddenly, because of this tension, she has fallen victim. Even if it turns out her mother was involved in identity fraud, Chidimma shouldn’t have to bear the consequences,” she said.

She views the bullying of Adetshina as a symptom of a deeper rivalry.

This goes beyond Chidimma. You see it in sport, in school competitions – any time there’s a Nigerian involved, there’s this underlying envy. South Africans don’t want Nigerians to outshine them,” she said.

Ikeri-Solarin compares the experiences of her two daughters: 21-year-old Anita, who studies in South Africa, and 23-year-old Esther, who studies in the United States.

“There’s a stark difference. In South Africa, they see foreigners as threats,” she said, adding that the government should do more to educate citizens. “People migrate all over the world. There are South Africans living abroad, and they’re not treated the way Nigerians are here.”

South Africa witnessed outbreaks of severe xenophobic violence in 2008 and 2015 in which dozens of people were killed. NGO Xenowatch also reported 170 incidents of xenophobia in 2022 and 2023 and 18 incidents in the first quarter of 2024.

South African foreign relations analyst Sanusha Naidu explained that anti-immigrant sentiment in South Africa is Afrophobic. However, she cautioned against interpreting the Adetshina debacle as South Africans targeting Nigerians more.

“Let me put it this way, Nigerians give as they get,” she said of the online social rivalry between both states.

Naidu said tensions between large African countries were political, economic and social.

“I think the challenge is not about South Africa and Nigeria and whether we [are] Afrophobic towards them … There are many competing factors and drives and push and pull issues that informed the way we react,” she said.

“In person, I haven’t faced xenophobia. My interactions have been pretty normal. Online, though, that’s where the confrontations happen,” he said.

Obadire believes the root of the social tension is frustration on both sides.

Everyday South Africans feel like their needs aren’t being met, and then they see someone who’s different from them seemingly getting ahead. On the other side, Nigerians are open about their success, which creates friction,” he explained.

Unlike Solarin, Obadire found university life in Johannesburg welcoming and even secured employment after graduation. However, when asked about the Adetshina controversy, he admits both sides could have handled it better.

Meanwhile, Joseph (not his real name), a South African security guard working at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital in Soweto – where Adetshina was born – claims that many foreign nationals give birth at the hospital and attempt to register their children as South Africans through illicit means.

“Money talks here,” Joseph said, alluding to corruption in government services.

In Soweto, 22-year-old Patience Dlamini harbours negative views about Nigerians, echoing widespread stereotypes.

“Nigerians commit a lot of crimes,” she said, though she admits she has no proof. “I don’t think the government would lie about her [Adetshina’s] mother stealing someone’s identity. They need to get to the bottom of it.”

Dlamini’s sentiment is shared by other young South Africans who believe that Nigerian immigrants dominate sectors like hospitality and retail while contributing to unemployment and crime.

The social media storm around Adetshina even spurred pranks between South Africans and Nigerians on the e-hailing platform Bolt – which is big in both countries. The taxi app allows users to book “intercountry” requests. People in both countries took advantage of this last month, with Nigerians requesting rides in South Africa and South Africans requesting rides in Nigeria before cancelling them. The so-called ‘Bolt war’ caused prices to surge, left some riders stranded, and led to Bolt restricting intercountry requests.

Alex Asakitikpi, a Nigerian sociologist based in Johannesburg, warns that online tensions can have real-life consequences. He attributes the conflict to economic rivalry between South Africa and Nigeria.

“The comments made by some South African ministers about Chidimma certainly escalated the issue,” he said.


Asakitikpi, who moved to Johannesburg in 2012, acknowledges that while he has experienced xenophobia, most of his South African colleagues have been supportive.

“I overlook the subtle hostility. But I’ve taken precautions, like stopping communication with certain individuals. I don’t visit them anymore, nor do I invite them to visit me,” he admitted.

He argues that politics and media narratives often fuel xenophobia towards Nigerians.

It’s unfortunate. Just recently, the South African government denied a Nigerian sports team visas. Such actions institutionalise antagonism,” he said.

Olorunfemi Adeleke, a migrant rights activist, agrees.

“In South Africa, it’s almost like being a successful migrant is a crime. The moment you succeed, you face a barrage of investigations,” he said.

Adetshina’s experience, while tragic, underscores the complexities of South African-[quote]Nigerian relations, analysts say.

These tensions, though most visible online, reflect deeper issues that both countries must confront if they hope to foster peace and mutual understanding.

Both South African and Nigerian social analysts agree that the rivalry doesn’t benefit either country or its people.
https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2024/9/17/how-a-beauty-queen-became-the-face-of-south-africa-nigeria-tensions

Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by God1000(op):
It's time to cut diplomatic ties with south Africa and place sanctions on them because it appears the south African government is aiding and abetting This whole nonsense

Let's give them the treatment Russia got for invading Ukraine, south Africa must be punished

No nigerian should hide his or her identity in south Africa for any reason, I will never travel to south Africa
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by docdes:
Africa needs to think. Any person or people who antagonize success for its own sake, can never be truly successful...

In South Africa, it’s almost like being a successful migrant is a crime. The moment you succeed, you face a barrage of investigations,” he said.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by DevilsEqual(m): 2:33pm On Sep 17, 2024
cheesy

She no get picture?

Make we see her face na

When the controversy around Adetshina began, Solarin said she raised the matter for discussion with some of her international relations professors at the University of Pretoria, but was largely ignored. Her peers, on the other hand, tried to justify their belief that Adetshina should be disqualified based on unfounded rumours that her father may have been linked to criminality.
Its sad but doesnt change anything

Humans are territorial instinctively and those who couldnt preserve their heritage and boundaries, like Babylon and Assyria were swallowed up centuries later and are now nonexistent


It has nothing to do with being civil. Even the Romans killed Julius Caesars son, just because they didnt want the son of an Egyptian mother(Queen Cleopatra) to rule them.

The hostility from the SA folks is barbaric but stopping her from contesting for the pageant is 100% normal

I wish them well
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Mariangeles(f):
I don't blame them.
If they were still kept busy with apartheid, they wouldn't have time for xenophobia.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Afonja44: 2:45pm On Sep 17, 2024
South Africa is populated by 90% domestic black slaves.

Slaves hate seeing free people especially if the free men are their kind.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Ekakamba: 3:31pm On Sep 17, 2024
Like Nigeria, like SA. Nonsense and condiments.




Social media has become a platform for spreading harmful rhetoric, exacerbating anti-Nigerian sentiments in the country.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by mrjoeblinks: 3:31pm On Sep 17, 2024
Ehen?
.
This matter never still die huh
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by AmalaAtiEwedu: 3:32pm On Sep 17, 2024
grin
Mzansi Xenophobiagrin
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Jestin: 3:33pm On Sep 17, 2024
I have been to South Africa more than three times for visit. One thing I notice about them is that they despise their fellow blacks but worship the whites. I once told one babe there we don’t regard whites in Nigeria. Not that we hate anybody but we don’t bow to anyone too.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Houseofglam7(f): 3:34pm On Sep 17, 2024
🫤
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by money121(m): 3:34pm On Sep 17, 2024
Ok
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Nobody: 3:34pm On Sep 17, 2024
.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by ednut1(m): 3:35pm On Sep 17, 2024
What kind of name is Adetsinahuh Did she also fake that part
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Sepukku: 3:36pm On Sep 17, 2024
DevilsEqual:
cheesy

She no get picture?

Make we see her face na



Its sad but doesnt change anything

Humans are territorial instinctively and those who couldnt preserve their heritage and boundaries, like Babylon and Assyria were swallowed up centuries later and are now nonexistent


It has nothing to do with being civil. Even the Romans killed Julius Caesars son, just because they didnt want the son of an Egyptian mother(Queen Cleopatra) to rule them.

The hostility from the SA folks is barbaric but stopping her from contesting for the pageant is 100% normal

I wish them well
If we were all territorial and allowed to indulge in our most primal proclivities maybe even you wouldn't be here today speaking freely on an online forum.

Think well.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Ashirioluwa: 3:38pm On Sep 17, 2024
Nigerians are being ridiculed anywhere they go, even in Africa.

The truth is that Nigerians don’t have leaders who can fight for us.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Melagros(m): 3:38pm On Sep 17, 2024
COMRADES, I don't know why South Africa like challenging Nigeria in every aspect of social life
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by jmoore(m): 3:38pm On Sep 17, 2024
DevilsEqual:
cheesy

She no get picture?

Make we see her face na



Its sad but doesnt change anything

Humans are territorial instinctively and those who couldnt preserve their heritage and boundaries, like Babylon and Assyria were swallowed up centuries later and are now nonexistent


It has nothing to do with being civil. Even the Romans killed Julius Caesars son, just because they didnt want the son of an Egyptian mother(Queen Cleopatra) to rule them.

The hostility from the SA folks is barbaric but stopping her from contesting for the pageant is 100% normal

I wish them well
Who later won the South African pageant? A WHITE woman. That renders your comment pointless.

Stupidity is not normal. They stopped a fellow black lady from contesting and allowed a white lady to win the contest.

Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by IrepChrist: 3:39pm On Sep 17, 2024
It's time to put this matter to rest.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by FourQu: 3:39pm On Sep 17, 2024
Chidinma amaka cheesy
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by MadPolitician: 3:42pm On Sep 17, 2024
These ijiots call us kwrekwerres or something? These ones that look like stillborns?
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by STEWpid(f):

C
h a i..










SA vs NG wAR is a fight that will continue till they enter grAve!!




SA did not just cAUsed it;

They cURsed it,,


Pull Shit!!

Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Konquest:
God1000:
Obadire believes the root of the social tension is frustration on both sides.

“Everyday South Africans feel like their needs aren’t being met, and then they see someone who’s different from them seemingly getting ahead. On the other side, Nigerians are open about their success, which creates friction,” he explained.

Unlike Solarin, Obadire found university life in Johannesburg welcoming and even secured employment after graduation. However, when asked about the Adetshina controversy, he admits both sides could have handled it better.

Meanwhile, Joseph (not his real name), a South African security guard working at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital in Soweto – where Adetshina was born – claims that many foreign nationals give birth at the hospital and attempt to register their children as South Africans through illicit means.

“Money talks here,” Joseph said, alluding to corruption in government services.


In Soweto, 22-year-old Patience Dlamini harbours negative views about Nigerians, echoing widespread stereotypes.

“Nigerians commit a lot of crimes,” she said, though she admits she has no proof. “I don’t think the government would lie about her [Adetshina’s] mother stealing someone’s identity. They need to get to the bottom of it.”

Dlamini’s sentiment is shared by other young South Africans who believe that Nigerian immigrants dominate sectors like hospitality and retail while contributing to unemployment and crime.
It's a big mess. With reference to the bolded section, it was also officially detected that Chidimma was NOT even born in that Soweto hospital where this Aljazeera journalist said she was born! The writer did NOT update himself fully about this case. As of late August 2024 when the briefing from the DHA and South African Parliament session took place, it was fully reported in the video that went viral that Chidimma's name was not even in the birth register.

As the South African security guy at the SA hospital duly NOTED, corruption too is embedded in the South African fabric and they have to work on that. If there hadn't been some corrupt South Africans, Chidimma's Mozambican mother and Enugu State-born father would not have taken part in the illegal acquisition of illegal document and IDENTITY THEFT. Now with better computerization of of identity data, more of these illegally acquired South African citizenships are being detected.

It's even annoying that while investigations where still ongoing, Chidimma flew out of South Africa and headed for Nigeria for that so-called beauty contest and her Mozambican mother also went underground and could NOT be found at the address she gave as her location which is illegal under the law. The South African elite security called the "Hawks" and other Intelligence agencies were extremely careless for allowing that girl to fly to Nigeria because she could be summoned to testify at anytime for cross-examination while the criminal case of identity theft and fraud is going on in court.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2INxYX_2xw
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Atheistan: 3:44pm On Sep 17, 2024
Ok
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Chucks13: 3:45pm On Sep 17, 2024
God pls pick my call to be in position f power in Nigeria one good day my only mission will be how to bleed South Africa to death, I will be so ruthless about anything South Africa I so much hate them. I'm still angry how Nigeria govt and Nigerians wasted over $60Billion to helped these motherficker during apatheid, I pray everyday for the return of apatheid in South Africa because I want them to suffer till eternity.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by mohbadliveson: 3:45pm On Sep 17, 2024
And they rigged out our contestants here and declared her winner in order to spite South Africa
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Mayflowa(m): 3:46pm On Sep 17, 2024
Ekakamba:
Like Nigeria, like SA. Nonsense and condiments.




Social media has become a platform for spreading harmful rhetoric, exacerbating anti-Nigerian sentiments in the country.
I disagree, SA is worse but Nigeria is the worst when it comes to tribalism
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by atobs4real(m): 3:46pm On Sep 17, 2024
Some of those SA guys are evil and also putting SA in a bad light
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by Konquest:
ednut1:
What kind of name is Adetsinahuh Did she also fake that part
Indeed, it's a forged name @Ednut1. There is NO letter T and H in ADESINA which is the standard Yoruba spelling.

The South African authorities also detected that both the father and Mozambican mother of that girl worked in collusion with 3 identified South African officials (one of them is already dead) of the Department of Home Affairs to illegally obtain a stolen South African Identify in 2001 hence illegally acquiring South African citizenship. Chidimma's Mozambican mother was never a South African right from the start (with the Aljazeera article wrongly alluded to). In any event South Africa has already withdrawn the citizenship of Chidimma including her alleged Mozambican mother and father who is from Enugu State by the name Michael Okechukwu "Adetshina." That's the name her father is known by in South Africa. If Chidimma who Identified herself as an Ibo girl (because that is who her father is) in a media interview she had last week has to go back to South Africa, she would have to apply for a South African visa to get into that country.

About 700,000 DUPLICATE illegal identities have also been detected in South Africa and more criminal prosecutions and eventual deportations will take place.

I blame South Africa though for having a lax system back in the day which enabled corrupt South African officials to sell South African IDs to irresponsible people who don't deserve it.

In any event, that girl's parents and other South Africans have to face justice for their crimes. Period.
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by atobs4real(m): 3:46pm On Sep 17, 2024
Some of those SA guys are evil and also putting SA in a bad light.
See there life outside
Re: How A Beauty Queen Became The Face Of South Africa-nigeria Tensions- Al Jazeera by dogo568: 3:47pm On Sep 17, 2024
Useless country
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