Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
India

African Students Grapple With Anger, Shock Over Attack On Nigerians

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Mar, 2017 12:52 PM
    African students in the capital are still shocked over the violent attack on some Nigerian students earlier this week in Greater Noida, which they say is a grim reminder of the "palpable hatred" which some Indians still harbour for the 'blacks'.
     
    The Monday night incident they say has struck a mortal blow in the hearts of Africans and wonder that such "militant racism" could exist in the 21st century in a country which was in the forefront of the global anti-racism struggle. 
     
    "This (attack) was a very barbaric incident and this is not the first time something like this has happened. A few years back (in 2012), a black man was killed in Jalandhar, and he was brutally lynched by a mob," a Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) national Clovis, who is pursuing his Ph.D in Chemistry from the Jawaharlal Nehru University, told IANS. 
     
    He said the attack has filled him with anger and frustration.
     
    "I am very upset. I have not gone out of the campus since the attacks... What is our fault? We are not here to do business, we are not stealing your job or money. We will go back once our courses are over... 
     
    "What if the same thing starts happening to Indians in other places...in Africa, where so many of them live!" he said and added that the episode does not bode well for the Indians living in Africa. 
     
    Another person from Kenya, a student of Environmental Sciences, said that he feared for his life after such open violence.
     
    "I fear for my life, I have not gone out of the campus after the incident and have also received advice from the African students association not to venture out for a few days... I am shocked to hear that such attacks were carried out purely on the basis of rumours.. It's all about mentality," he told IANS.
     
    Anthia of Zimbabwe wondered whether such acts of animosity can be take place only on the basis of hearsay.
     
     
    "As far as I know, the accusations (of drug running) are yet to be substantiated. There must be a feeling of rancour gathering for a long time against blacks, otherwise these attacks couldn't have been carried out," the JNU student said.
     
    Having been in India for only two months, Anthia said she hasn't faced any gross act of racism yet. But also confided that she is treated very differently at times and remembered being "handled terribly" at the hands of a hairdresser, who became very "frustrated" with her hair.
     
    The attack on a Nigerian student took place on Monday night in Greater Noida, some 40 km from the national capital, following protests over the death of a Class 12 student of a residential colony there due to a drug overdose. 
     
    Another Nigerian, a student of JNU, who has been living in the national capital for the last one month, said that the violence has "betrayed the trust between the two countries" and may become a cause of "coolness" in future.
     
    "How can people, who are treated as gods in my country, commit such an act," Edewale, a student of Global Studies Program, who is here for just one semester, told IANS.
     
    "In Nigeria, Indians are a very well respected lot..but here the reality is a bit different," he added ruefully.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Insensitive Congress cheated nation, punish them: Modi

    Insensitive Congress cheated nation, punish them: Modi
    Calling the Congress and the UPA government "insensitive" and "bent on destroying the country", BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi Friday said that they had "cheated" the country in their 10 years of rule and called upon the people to punish them. He claimed that the election would prove to be a complete rout for them.

    Insensitive Congress cheated nation, punish them: Modi

    Rajiv killing conspirators not to be free for now, kin dismayed

    Rajiv killing conspirators not to be free for now, kin dismayed
    The Supreme Court Friday said that the seven conspirators in the 1991 Rajiv Gandhi assassination will not be released for now, a ruling that left the mother of one of the convicts disappointed.

    Rajiv killing conspirators not to be free for now, kin dismayed

    US court asks Sikh group to summon Manmohan Singh by June 18

    US court asks Sikh group to summon Manmohan Singh by June 18
    A US court has asked a Sikh group to serve summons on Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh by June 18 or face dismissal of a case of alleged violation of human rights during his tenure.

    US court asks Sikh group to summon Manmohan Singh by June 18

    Amarnath Yatra to begin June 28

    Amarnath Yatra to begin June 28
    The annual yatra to the Himalayan cave shrine of Amarnath in Jammu and Kashmir's Anantnag district will start on June 28, it was announced Thursday.

    Amarnath Yatra to begin June 28

    Modi, Kejriwal, Arundhati Roy among Time's 100 influential people

    Modi, Kejriwal, Arundhati Roy among Time's 100 influential people
    Bharatiya Janata Party's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi and Aam Aadmi Party leader Arvind Kejriwal have made it to Time 100 list of the world's most influential people along with Indian novelist Arundhati Roy.

    Modi, Kejriwal, Arundhati Roy among Time's 100 influential people

    SC entrusts Padmanabhaswamy temple to five-member committee

    SC entrusts Padmanabhaswamy temple to five-member committee
    The Supreme Court Thursday entrusted the administration of the Sri Padmanabhaswamy temple in Kerala to a five-member committee headed by the district judge of Thiruvananthapuram.

    SC entrusts Padmanabhaswamy temple to five-member committee