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Crackdown Or Crack In Justice? The Nigerian Question In India

As I flipped through the pages of today’s news, one report in Saturday PUNCH stopped me in my tracks—a troubling account of India’s ongoing crackdown on Nigerians. It is a development as consequential as it is unsettling, and certainly not one that should be ignored. It raises urgent questions about justice, diplomacy, and the lived realities of Nigerians abroad. It is against this backdrop that I offer the following perspective.

India’s intensified enforcement against foreign nationals, particularly Nigerians, is rooted in legitimate concerns—drug trafficking, cybercrime, and visa violations. Recent figures showing hundreds of arrests and a sharp rise in deportations provide authorities with justification for action.

But enforcement, no matter how justified, must remain anchored in fairness. When a crackdown begins to look like a campaign against a nationality, it ceases to be purely about law—and begins to raise deeper ethical and diplomatic questions.

Voices from the Ground: Fear, Profiling, and Brutalisation

From Mumbai to Delhi, Nigerians are telling a deeply troubling story.

Students and business people allege:

Disturbing video evidence—broadcast on platforms like Arise TV—has amplified these fears, showing alleged attacks on Nigerians by locals. For many, the fear is no longer hypothetical; it is lived reality.

Visa Regime or Systemic Disadvantage?

Beyond policing, Nigeria’s diaspora in India is grappling with what appears to be a uniquely burdensome visa system.

Accounts from students reveal:

More contentious is the claim of unequal treatment. Students from countries like Ghana or Zimbabwe reportedly face significantly lower fees and longer renewal windows. If true, this raises uncomfortable questions about fairness and possible discrimination embedded within the system.

As one student put it, this is “the cross Nigerians bear” simply to remain legally present.

The Shadow of Crime: A Complicating Reality

Any honest conversation must confront an inconvenient truth: a minority of Nigerians in India have been implicated in criminal activities, particularly drug trafficking.

Data shows:

This reality has contributed to a damaging stereotype—one that risks defining an entire community by the actions of a few.

More troubling are allegations from diplomatic sources that some Nigerians act as informants, reporting fellow nationals to authorities for financial gain. Such practices not only fracture the community but also reinforce negative perceptions.

Still, crime by a minority cannot justify suspicion of the majority.

Collective Blame: When Enforcement Becomes Prejudice

Here lies the heart of the crisis.

To assume that every Nigerian is a potential criminal is not policing—it is profiling.

Reports of:

suggest a pattern that goes beyond targeted enforcement.

This is where India must tread carefully. A nation’s strength lies not only in enforcing its laws but in doing so without prejudice.

NANS Steps In: Pressure from Home

The issue has now escalated beyond individual complaints.

The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has:

Leaders like Abubakar Mallawa and Anzaku Shedrack have cited “alarming reports” of inhumane treatment, backed by testimonies and video evidence.

Their message is clear: this is no longer a diaspora issue—it is a national concern.

Diplomatic Silence vs Diplomatic Responsibility

Nigeria’s official response, led by agencies like the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM), has been cautious.

The position:

While technically correct, this stance risks appearing passive.

Former envoys such as Sola Abolurin and Dr. Yemi Farounbi have called for:

Diplomacy is not interference—it is representation. And moments like this demand more visibility, not less.

Responsibility on Both Sides

This crisis is not without nuance.

Nigerians in India must:
At the same time, Indian authorities must:

Justice must be both done—and seen to be done.

Beyond India: A Test Case for Global Migration

What is unfolding is part of a broader global pattern: countries tightening borders while grappling with multicultural realities.

But India’s handling of Nigerians will send a wider message:

For Nigeria, the episode is a reminder that diaspora protection must move beyond rhetoric to proactive engagement.

The Bottom Line: Justice Must Not Wear a Bias

The Nigerian community in India today stands at a precarious intersection—caught between legitimate law enforcement and alleged systemic bias.

Yes, crimes must be punished.
Yes, immigration laws must be respected.

But no, an entire nationality must not become a suspect class.

If this line is not carefully redrawn, what began as a crackdown on crime risks becoming something far more damaging: a breakdown of justice itself.

And that is a cost neither India nor Nigeria can afford.

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