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Politics / Re: Check This Out: 42-year Old Panel Beater Redesigns Vw Beetle by alias64: 7:49pm On Apr 30, 2010
This very volksroys sort of thing was a common site in Warri at one time.
Politics / Re: The Nigerian Spirit Is F*cking Beautiful! by alias64: 6:04pm On Mar 31, 2010
you're not alone
Politics / Nigerians Fight Crime In South African Coastal City by alias64: 11:39pm On Mar 26, 2010
http://www1.voanews.com/english/news/africa/southern/Unusual-Pursuits-part1-Darren-Taylor-86749937.html


Nigerians Fight Crime in South African Coastal City

Nigerians in South African city trying to reduce crime on Parliament Street to help business and customers

Darren Taylor | Port Elizabeth, South Africa 07 March 2010





Port Elizabeth's Parliment Street was a rundown, crime-infested area, but is now a vibrant nightspot-thanks in part to some Nigerian anti-crime activists

"Most Nigerians in South Africa are not drug dealers; we are businessmen, professionals, like doctors. But when South Africans hear you are Nigerian, you can see the suspicion in their eyes.

A cosmopolitan crowd, dressed in multicolored finery, shimmies the night and early morning hours away in one of the many chic bars that line the street.  During breaks from dancing, the sweating, smiling revelers sip at gaudy cocktails and nibble at plates of food. 

But the vibe in Parliament Street, one of South Africa’s most historic areas, in the coastal city of Port Elizabeth – wasn’t always as “fantastic” as this, says Etienne Barkhuysen, owner of a local coffee shop.

Up until recently, businesses like his had to shut their doors long before midnight because of the threat of armed robbers.  Drug dealers and love-peddlers lined Parliament Street – named in the 1800s after it hosted the first sitting of the Cape Province parliament.  Young men, fueled by alcohol consumed in their parked cars, battled one another with bottles and fists in vicious street fights.  The once vibrant, multiracial, multicultural restaurants, nightclubs and bars closed, relocating to safer, cleaner areas.  Economic stagnation hung heavy over the area.   

But now, although signs of the previous decay are still evident, the “boom times” are back for Parliament Street, Barkhuysen says enthusiastically.  Businesses have reopened.  The streets are no longer littered with broken glass, blood and used condoms.  Instead, they’re lined with flowering plants and sparkling new signs advertising parties.  People in search of entertainment throng the venue nightly, no longer afraid of criminals. 

Central to the rejuvenation of Parliament Street is a group of Nigerian immigrants, who took action when locals accused Nigerian criminals of turning the area into a no-go zone.

‘Amazing’ Nigerians ‘clean up the street’

In an initial attempt to manage the crisis, owners of businesses hired private security officers to patrol the street.  But the crime continued.  “There were some muggings and stuff,” says Barkhuysen.  “But the biggest problem was people running after cars, jumping in, trying to sell drugs.  A lot of people felt threatened by it; they felt they were being hijacked.  And also people in the street being grabbed and (offered) drugs….  Unfortunately, a lot of the crime was being perpetrated by Nigerians.”
D. Taylor
Etienne Barkhuysen (left), a South African businessman who cooperated with the Nigerians to "clean up" historic Parliament Street, makes a point during an interview with VOA

Barkhuysen, as chairman of the Parliament Street Business Forum, approached some “respected” Nigerians who also owned enterprises in the vicinity, in a final bid for help to stop the chaos.

“When people started running away from Parliament Street, it didn’t only affect the white (South African) business owners; it also affected the Nigerians that owned businesses in this area,” says Chukwudi Obiezu, a Nigerian entrepreneur.

“So we had to get involved,” says the burly man, who’s also chairman of the Port Elizabeth branch of the Nigerian Union of South Africa, an organization formed to support Nigerians living in Africa’s largest economy.  “We became sick and ashamed of always hearing that it was Nigerians doing these terrible deeds,” he says. 

Barkhuysen credits Obiezu and his Nigerian partners for “cleaning up” the street.  “They were amazing,” says the South African.  “They turned things around very fast.”  Obiezu adds, “If you’re coming around and we see you doing (crime), we get you and we hand you over to the police – whether you’re a Nigerian or not.”

But sometimes the Nigerian Union’s intervention involves far more than a simple “hand-over” of a suspect to the authorities….  Sometimes, says Obiezu, he and his fellow crime fighters have to get “heavy handed” with alleged criminals.

Nigerian crime fighters ‘go above the law’…. But crime continues

A Parliament Street restaurateur, who wants to remain anonymous, comments, “The Nigerian Union guys don’t mess around.  If they catch a criminal, they don’t play.  They are very ruthless – especially if the suspect’s one of their own nationals who is dirtying their names with crime….”
D. Taylor
Nigerian entrepreneur in Port Elizabeth, Chukwudi Obiezu, says local police have given him and his fellow crime fighters permission to use "force" against criminals, especially Nigerian drug dealers

Obiezu acknowledges that he and his colleagues “fight fire with fire” in their war against criminal gangs in Parliament Street.

“You don’t take a knife to a gunfight,” he says, a steely look of resolve hardening his eyes.  “Sometimes talking does nothing.”

Obiezu continues, “To an extent, we were able to convince the police to let us clean our own people our own way.  So the police gave us just a little power – more than what we should have.  The police allow us to use a bit of force.  We are allowed to go a little bit above the law, to weed the bad eggs out.  And when the criminals experience this, they run like the cowards they actually are.”

But some drug dealers haven’t “run.”  When VOA visited the area, we were approached by a young man who identified himself as “Mike.”  He said he was “from Lagos.”  In the sheltered darkness of an abandoned building, “Mike” displayed an assortment of narcotics – including cocaine, ecstasy and marijuana – and offered the drugs for sale.   

According to veteran Parliament Street security guard Mary Van Rensburg, the district’s still “far from safe.  Sometimes in the night, things are very bad here.  People are getting robbed here,” she says.  Van Rensburg herself has fallen victim to the criminals.  “Two young men and a grey-haired old man took my money.  They had knives,” she recalls.  “They caught me off-guard….” 

But Van Rensburg maintains that “by far” the biggest problem in Parliament Street remains drug dealing.  She voices no doubt as to who the perpetrators are.  “The Nigerian criminals are still here,” she says, whispering.  “It’s them who bring in the drugs.”

The neon-bibbed security guard says she witnesses Nigerian criminals doing “very terrible things.
But I keep my mouth shut.  I am very scared of the Nigerians.  They are a very vicious nation.  If you tell the police about them, they will hurt you.”

‘We are not drug dealers, we are businessmen’

Another Nigerian, Sunday Smith, manages a store near Parliament Street.  He agrees with Van Rensburg that crime still happens in the precinct but insists that “compared to what it was like in the past, this place is heaven.”  He points to a shiny new boutique hotel in the street and says “it wouldn’t be here if things were as bad” as Van Rensburg says.
D. Taylor
Parliament Street security guard, Mary van Rensburg, says Nigerian criminals are still active in the district, despite increased presence of police and anti-crime activists

And he’s offended by her contention that only Nigerians are responsible for drug peddling in the area and that Nigerians in general are “vicious.”

“Prejudice” such as this on the part of many South Africans against Nigerians, he says, makes him “shed tears.” 

“Most Nigerians in South Africa, we are not drug dealers; we are businessmen, even professionals, like doctors.  But when South Africans hear you are a Nigerian, you can see the suspicion in their eyes.  They automatically think, ‘Ah, this man, he is a drug man….’”

Folorunsho Jafoluwa is a lawyer and a Nigerian resident of Port Elizabeth.  Despite this, he says he’s regularly confronted by South Africans convinced he’s a drug dealer – simply because he’s Nigerian.  “They even ask me for drugs!” he says, laughing.  “I tell them, ‘I’ve not ever seen drugs, not even in Nigeria; how can you think I know what do to sell you drugs?’  But they never believe me; they just smile and carry on asking me for drugs.” 

Obiezu insists that many drug criminals in the country – and in Parliament Street specifically – are not Nigerians.  “So many black foreign criminals hide under the cloak of being Nigerian.  And to the South Africans, if you are a black foreign African, you are simply called ‘a Nigerian.’  That is how we have come to have such a bad reputation,” he says.

Obiezu adds that Nigerians’ “natural flamboyance” make them “easy targets” to blame for crime.  “We are very loud, and also built very big.  We have very dark skin.  If two or three Nigerians stand together, we look like a big crowd, very threatening,” he explains. 

For some, unemployment leads to crime

Smith acknowledges the presence of some “bad eggs” in the Nigerian community in South Africa.  He says young Nigerians continue to “stream” into the country.  “Some of them are cobblers; some of them are mechanics…. They can’t get jobs, so big time criminals recruit them to sell drugs on the streets.”

D. Taylor
Parliament Street has been rejuvenated, but signs of its previous decay, such as this abandoned building-are still evident

Smith’s comments raise another issue that concerns the Nigerian Union and, according to Obiezu, is responsible for some Nigerians in South Africa turning to crime.   

“There are over 300 qualified Nigerian medical doctors in South Africa.  But bureaucracy means they are not being issued work permits.  How are such people supposed to survive?” he asks, continuing, “You get married to a South African.  You are given a permit to reside in South Africa for two years.  But under that permit, you are prohibited from working.  Is that not a ticket to go into crime?”     

For Obiezu and many other Nigerians in South Africa, the struggle to be recognized as valuable members of society in the country where they’ve chosen to settle endures.  But, on this street in Port Elizabeth, they have plenty of supporters and admirers.

“The fact that I and other South Africans in Parliament Street are now able to make a decent living here is largely because of Nigerians,” says Etienne Barkhuysen.  “I hope others realize that, when they are so quick to condemn the Nigerian presence in South Africa.”

1 Like 1 Share

Politics / Re: British Lawyer Faces USA Extradition Over Nigeria Bribery Case - Shame Shame by alias64: 2:45pm On Mar 26, 2010
It is like this. The West is like the Drug Barons funding huge poppy fields, and flying drugs all over the world. Corrupt politicians and business people in Africa are a little like the little guys on the street corner distributing the drugs in the neighbourhood. I suppose 419 are the little guys on the street corners distributing the drugs to the mansions and homes of the drug Barons.


its a hastily thought out metaphor, but there we are,


to ordinary law abiding people the crooks are all disreputable. 


The thing is you cannot defeat the problem by concentrating on one part of it. If, for instance, you are one of those Nigerian families stuck in a failing part of London, you cannot keep your kids safe simply by waging a finger at them and telling them to keep out of the gangs, stay out of trouble and concentrate on your education. The corruption will come after them sooner or later, the only way you can solve the problem, if you can’t run away, is to work with others to improve the aspirations of the area.  This means working with schools, community organisation, delinquent young parents etc etc.

Likewise, corruption in Nigeria cannot be defeated in isolation. The corruption does not exist in a vacuum. The west have got to put their house in order and then help us isolate our mega thieves

Politics / Re: Nairaland Politics In One Word by alias64: 1:59pm On Mar 26, 2010
Munchausen
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In One Word? by alias64: 1:35pm On Mar 26, 2010
Giant


Simply the giant of Africa; it hurts the many rest-of-Africans and Akata's on here to accept but the truth hurts wink
Politics / Re: British Lawyer Faces USA Extradition Over Nigeria Bribery Case - Shame Shame by alias64: 1:27pm On Mar 26, 2010
What about Jeffrey Tesler, 61, from London? ain' he corrupt?

Actually, who is more corrupt, the man from an affluent nation offering money to the man from an impoverished nation or the man from an impoverished nation wowed by money?


The men of the West like this Jeffrey Tesler guy have always exploited African vulnerability, this is what 419’s exploited. They simply reversed the table. I do not think Nigerians yet realise how brilliant those original 419 people were.

Politics / Re: Back To The Basics, Why Has Nigeria Failed ? by alias64: 12:52pm On Mar 26, 2010
Nigeria has not failed anymore than America has succeeded. Better to state, 'why in your opinion is Nigeria failing

Nations rise and nations fall and then rise a little and fall a great deal and then rise a great deal and then fall a little and then flat-line for long
Politics / Re: 58 Nigerians Deported From Sudan by alias64: 12:48pm On Mar 26, 2010
@Ikengawo


You’re just wasting your time, most of these people aren’t about reason, they’re foreigners hell bent on teasing Nigerians and some Nigerians itching to make a political point out of anything.
Politics / Re: 58 Nigerians Deported From Sudan by alias64: 10:37am On Mar 25, 2010


Thor:
That is a typical silly statement. Nigerians are not free to go wherever they want, only in Nigeria. They do not have any rights in other countries unless they follow that countries visa application / entry regulations. So many Nigerians abuse the system it makes it bad for honest Nigerians to gain entry.


Oh well silly me for thinking that all are smart enough to take it for granted that in travelling abroad there are issues of passports, papers, taxi calling, inoculations, airports, aeroplanes, visas and all the paraphernalia that one dose not have to state categorically or he/she will end up writing a whole book.
Business / Re: US To Assist Nigeria On Nuclear Power by alias64: 10:28am On Mar 25, 2010
Bring it on. Maybe, one day in future will get to do this to South Africa:




[img]http://rhymeswithright.mu.nu/archives/images/middle_finger_flame.jpg[/img]



        Lol,  grin   good init
Politics / Re: 58 Nigerians Deported From Sudan by alias64: 10:19am On Mar 25, 2010
[b]Nigerians should travel wherever they want in search of work. There will never come a time no mater how wealthy Nigeria becomes or how well organised when all Nigerians will stay in Nigeria for work or pleasure. Neither is it desirable that they should do so. We’r not prisoners restricted to Nigeria. In addition, however some people abroad desperately would like to contain Nigerians by exploiting our dangerous self-stereotyping which was born out of political games, for their racist purpose, Nigerians will travel.  Ikengawo made the point that Americans are deported from various lands all the time and the point he made remains salient. American youths do travel in search of work in foreign climes; the comparative extent is irrelevant to Ikengawo’s point.  I would add that Indians and Chinese travel all over the world in search of work, in even greater numbers, even in search of better life, why shouldn’t Nigerians. We’re not prisoners nor should we try to beat ourselves into the portrait of the good little boys and girls the west wants. See fig 1.2




                                                               

                                                                                                     fig 1.2



As for Sudan, people should bear in mind that many of the Nigerians who travel to that country are from northern Nigeria. I do not mean that this justifies any illegal Sudanese acts against them but that like Somalis and many Africans of the Islamic faith throughout Africa, Sudan and the middle east and even as far as Iran provides a major point of destination. African Muslims appear to hold to the idea - far more than is good for them - that all Muslims are brothers. I have read that Sudanese have a derogatory term exclusively for our Nigerians which translates as slaves.
[/b]
Business / Re: Outbound Call Centres In Nigeria by alias64: 11:45pm On Mar 24, 2010

johnhou

Seriously if Nigeria problems cant be fixed,and you insist it must be in west africa,then move to Ghana.



Maybe he should move to Ghana, because, come to think of it, the Chinese are the only Asians Nigeria needs
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In One Word? by alias64: 6:21pm On Mar 24, 2010
Relentless

Lol grin
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In One Word? by alias64: 5:34pm On Mar 24, 2010
Avengers



Tis the nation brought into existence by the sprites of the millions beneath the Atlantic Ocean. The forsaken will have their reckoning.
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In One Word? by alias64: 5:15pm On Mar 24, 2010
Soulful
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In Two Words by alias64: 12:27pm On Mar 24, 2010
African Hope
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In Two Words by alias64: 12:16pm On Mar 24, 2010
Super cultural
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In Two Words by alias64: 11:47am On Mar 24, 2010
kick backside grin


Especially UK/US Akata ass
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In Two Words by alias64: 8:56am On Mar 24, 2010
Smartest Africans
Business / Re: Outbound Call Centres In Nigeria by alias64: 8:43am On Mar 24, 2010
The Person pointing him towards Ghana is most likely a Ghanaian. Isn’t that obvious? Jesus, when will Nigerians learn that many of the people who make these extraordinarily negative statements about Nigeria on this board aren’t Nigerians? angry
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In Two Words by alias64: 8:25am On Mar 24, 2010
The Best
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In One Word? by alias64: 8:22am On Mar 24, 2010
extraordinary
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In One Word? by alias64: 11:32pm On Mar 23, 2010
Vibrant
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In Two Words by alias64: 11:26pm On Mar 23, 2010
Akata kickers grin
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In Two Words by alias64: 11:15pm On Mar 23, 2010
Brave Hearts
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In One Word? by alias64: 11:13pm On Mar 23, 2010
Mellifluous
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In Two Words by alias64: 6:17pm On Mar 23, 2010
Black proud
Religion / Re: Man Gives £480 Million To Church In 'Pact With God' by alias64: 6:12pm On Mar 23, 2010

smooooooth wrote:

a nigerian will never do this, no matter how devout they are. them too like money, like say na that one go take them enter heaven


not true. I have the capacity to do so and I am Nigerian. Only, if I had that type of money, the first thing I would do is build a chain of free food centres all over Nigeria. My centres would serve one good full protein meal to all comers every afternoon.

Incidentally, the bloke who gave away all this money to church did so in his 80’s – I believe. I mean, his life is almost done.
Politics / Re: Describe Nigeria In One Word? by alias64: 5:38pm On Mar 23, 2010
Fantastic
Politics / Re: Jonathan Invited To G8/g20 Roundtable by alias64: 2:06pm On Mar 23, 2010
while at it, he should wear some native attire not those coonish oyibo regalia. That usual clobber of he's makes me suspicious of his intelligence undecided
Politics / Why Do Nigerians Like Burning Candles? by alias64: 1:29pm On Mar 23, 2010



Consistently, satellite images of nighttime earth depict Nigeria, South Africa and Algeria as the most lit up parts of Africa. South Africa and Algeria have electricity and Nigeria does not - as we are told- so the light depicted over Nigeria most come from candles.


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