Agence France-Presse
Tuesday, November 5, 203
Nigeria told India on Tuesday that it feared for the safety of its
nationals in the resort state of Goa after one of its citizens was slain
and a local legislator compared Nigerians to "cancer".
Tensions have been rising in the tiny, palm-fringed state since a
Nigerian man was stabbed to death last week in a murder that police
blame on rivalry between local and Nigerian drug traffickers.
Nigeria's High Commission called the death a "cold-blooded" killing.
Local media reports said the Nigerian was hacked to death by a group of
Goan drug traffickers, while five other Nigerians suffered stab wounds.
Goan police arrested 53 Nigerians last week after around 200 of them
staged a protest against the killing, chasing a police hearse carrying
the corpse of the dead Nigerian and putting the body on the road.
Following the demonstration, which blocked Goa's main highway for
several hours, Goa's chief minister Manohar Parrikar asked police to
track down Nigerians living illegally in the former Portugese colony so
that they could be deported.
After the protest, a minister in the state's Hindu nationalist
Bharatiya Janata Party government, Dayanand Mandrekar, stirred more
controversy by saying: "Nigerians are like cancer".
Nigeria's High Commission issued a diplomatic note and demanded on
Tuesday that the security of its nationals be assured. It also called
for the immediate arrest of those who killed its citizen.
"We have lost one of our nationals in a cold-blooded murder,"
Nigerian High Commission press spokesman Tokunbo Falohun told the Press
Trust of India.
"The guilty should be immediately apprehended and brought to justice
and they should also compensate the family of the victim," the envoy
said.
The previous day, another High Commission official warned of
repercussions against Indians living in Nigeria if Goa did not stop
"evicting Nigerians" from the state and failed to arrest the killers.
Asked if there will be any "repercussions" from the murder, Falohun
said Tuesday there would be none if the matter was "justifiably" dealt
with by Indian authorities.
"There is a large Indian community working in Nigeria. There are two
temples in Lagos and all Indians have freedom to worship and for their
other activities. We also are demanding the same," Falohun said.
Meanwhile, India's foreign ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin said in
New Delhi that he was sure that the row could be settled "amicably".
"We have been assured that the investigation (into the murder) is underway," he said.
Goa's chief minister said Monday state police were close to arresting those responsible for the Nigerian's death.
Goa has been seeking to restore its image after a string of crimes.
Legislators have said the state is in the grips of a drug war.
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