This week South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma visited Nigeria and stressed that Africa’s two economic giants could work together. Relations have been fraught, not helped by South African deaths in a Nigerian pastor’s building and a $5bn Nigerian fine for a South African phone company.
Here, two writers take a tongue-in-cheek look at how the nations see each other.
How us South Africans view Nigerians
Milton Nkosi, Johannesburg
The view of Nigerians by South Africans can be described as a form of sibling rivalry, at best.
South Africans generally see Nigerians as having a chip on their shoulder along with an over-confidence tinged with a bit of arrogance.
Each time there’s a so-called 419 email scam involving strangers offering millions of dollars in exchange for banking details, locals here tend to blame it on the Nigerians.
That’s even if there is no evidence of which country the scam originates from.
Stereotypically, problems such as organised crime – including drug lords and prostitution rings – are seen as a Nigerian import.
Newspapers were very critical of Nigeria when a church building collapsed in Lagos two years ago killing 106 people – 81 of them were South African.
Authorities in the capital Pretoria complained that the bodies were not repatriated quickly enough.
The current deadlock between South African telecoms giant company MTN and Nigerian authorities about the $5bn (£3.5bn) fine imposed by Nigeria sits comfortably amongst many other squabbles.
I think South Africans have never honestly accepted being leap-frogged by Nigeria to the number one spot as Africa’s largest economy.
Until 2014 South Africa had always held the number one position.
So it came as some sort of relief to locals here, when data was released saying Johannesburg had more than twice as many dollar millionaires as Lagos.
The xenophobic attacks last year did not help the situation, even though no Nigerians who attacked specifically because of their nationality.
Nigeria recalled two diplomats after a row about visa restrictions, although both capitals denied that was the reason.
Sometimes it deteriorates to a level of frivolous accusations that Nigerian men who come into the country with the financial strength of hard currency take South African women from the local boys.
Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani, Abuja
To many Nigerians, South Africa is the closest to the West that you can find on the African continent.
The country’s shops could be mistaken for those found on Oxford Street in London.
Its roads are smooth and wide.
And its climate gives your complexion that peculiar glow which lets everyone back home know, without your having to boast, that you have just returned from abroad.
All this makes South Africa the holiday destination of choice for many Nigerians whenever an American or British visa is proving too hard to get.
And so, it is with sadness that Nigeria watches as South Africa regresses in ways that were previously associated with other African countries, such as frequent electricity outages.
BBC
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