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Nigeria’s Acting High Commissioner to South Africa, Alexander Ajayi, said the Federal Government intends to seek compensation for businesses and investments abandoned by Nigerians returning home under its voluntary evacuation programme, launched amid escalating anti-immigration tensions as nationwide protests unfold across South Africa

In an interview with Nigeria’s Channels Television, Ajayi said the government’s intervention would not end with evacuating affected citizens but would also focus on protecting their economic interests

DON’T MISS THIS:U.S. cuts operations at four South African diplomatic missions as June 30 protests begin

According to him, the Nigerian mission has directed returnees to compile detailed records of businesses, shops, cars and other movable and immovable properties they left behind before departing South Africa

The government’s intervention comes as the self-styled March and March movement begins nationwide anti-immigration protests across South Africa today – June 30, with organisers calling for the mass deportation of undocumented migrants

The demonstrations have heightened concerns among foreign nationals amid fears they could trigger xenophobic violence

Ajayi revealed that the issue has already been discussed with South African officials, including the country’s Deputy Minister of Finance, as both sides begin engagements over the fate of assets owned by Nigerian nationals

“In terms of the businesses, just three days ago, myself and the South African Deputy Minister of Finance were together, and we were discussing this,” he said

I have asked them before they left yesterday to document very accurately those things they were leaving behind in terms of businesses, in terms of even cars, movable and immovable properties.”

The Acting High Commissioner said the documentation exercise would provide the Nigerian government with evidence of the value of investments built over the years by affected citizens and could support future compensation claims

Although officials have yet to outline the legal framework under which compensation would be pursued, Ajayi’s remarks suggest Abuja is preparing to elevate the matter beyond consular assistance into a formal diplomatic engagement with Pretoria

The latest evacuation comes against the backdrop of Nigerian government estimates that about 500,000 Nigerians in South Africa are undocumented, although those figures have not been independently verified

The Federal Government has evacuated 335 Nigerians from South Africa under its voluntary repatriation programme as anti-immigration protests and xenophobic tensions continue to fuel fears among foreign nationals

While many Nigerians living in South Africa are legally resident, Ajayi said some voluntarily chose to return home over fears that the protests could disrupt businesses or escalate into violence

The demonstrations have attracted international attention

DON’T MISS THIS:South Africa deploys drones, 33,000 CCTV cameras and 13,000 officers to prevent anti-migrant protests from escalating

The U.S. Mission to South Africa has reduced operations at its diplomatic facilities in Cape Town, Durban, Johannesburg and Pretoria, citing potential security risks associated with the protests, while President Cyril Ramaphosa has urged demonstrators to remain peaceful and warned against vigilantism

Whether South Africa accepts responsibility for privately owned assets abandoned by Nigerians remains uncertain

However, Nigeria’s decision to begin documenting those losses signals that the issue could become a new point of engagement between Africa’s two largest economies as efforts continue to safeguard the interests of affected citizens

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