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Biting The Hand: How South Africa Forgot Nigeria’s 1976 Soweto Rescue

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Biting The Hand: How South Africa Forgot Nigeria’s 1976 Soweto Rescue

I do not know if I should begin this write up with a sigh or downplay the genuine ethics of journalism because of grievances.

However this article plays out, I want everybody to know that the world has witnessed the ultimate Pan-African betrayal. I make bold efforts to pour credence to this statement on account of what happened in Soweto 1976, and what is happening in South Africa 2026.

Fifty years ago today, the streets of Soweto ran red with the blood of children. On June 16, 1976, the South African apartheid regime opened fire on thousands of unarmed Black students protesting the forced enforcement of the Afrikaans language.

As the international community looked on with idle statements of condemnation, Nigeria, under the military leadership of Lt. General Olusegun Obasanjo refused to remain silent.

In an unprecedented display of pan-African brotherhood, the Nigerian government launched a massive humanitarian airlift. They bypassed apartheid restrictions by issuing hundreds of Nigerian passports to fleeing, stateless South African youth.

Through the newly established Southern Africa Relief Fund (SARF), Nigeria did not just offer these displaced students temporary refuge; it gave them a future. Everyday Nigerians stepped up to fund this survival pipeline.

Civil servants voluntarily sacrificed two percent of their monthly salaries, while Nigerian university and secondary students famously donated their own lunch money to help their southern brothers and sisters.

These traumatized South African exiles were integrated into Nigeria’s premium universities and secondary schools completely free of charge, shielded by a nation that viewed their struggle as its own.
Fast forward to the ongoing June 2026 crisis, and the tragedy of history’s short memory is on full display.

Today, the children of those who were once protected by Nigerian generosity are weaponizing hate on the streets of Johannesburg, Pretoria, and Durban.

Grassroots vigilante movements have turned on foreign nationals, terrorizing legally documented Nigerians, looting African-owned businesses, and executing door-to-door harassment.

The very people whose parents were given Nigerian passports to escape systemic oppression are now demanding to see the papers of African immigrants, hunting them down based on their accents or skin tones.
The brutal irony is as heartbreaking as it is infuriating.

A nation that was built on the back of billions of dollars in pan-African solidarity has allowed economic frustration to mutate into a beast of xenophobic violence.

As Nigeria is forced to deploy emergency repatriation flights to rescue its citizens from the same land it once poured its blood, sweat, and treasury to liberate, we are left with a sobering reality: Nigeria raised and sheltered vulnerable freedom fighters, only for those survivors to birth a generation that treats its oldest benefactors like prey.

I hate to acknowledge this but the truth is South Africa has turned many of us sad Africans. It’s a shame. A BIG SHAME!
To those Sparrow hawks in Antioch!
To those Beasts in Ephesus!
To those little pets who turned monsters on the night ago!
And to those sad Africans in South Africa?
Where is your dignity?
What have you done to your human consciousness?
Did you bury your humanity away in hades?
Do you not have any iota shame?

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