afrik.com
 
Tuesday 18 Nov. 2008    
 
  Assassination attempt on former anti-corruption chief in Nigeria to be probed  -  United Kingdom pledges 100 million pounds towards HIV/AIDS fight in Nigeria  -  Media coverage of Egyptian tycoon’s trial for the murder of Lebanese star blocked  -  Islamic leader accused of half a million US dollar fraud acquitted  -  The Gambia fires another magistrate  -    
     
 
Opinion editorial - European Union - Somalia - Sudan

A dark day in Athens : Somalis and Sudanese nourish Greek racism

It was a bloody afternoon as machetes, axes and cutlasses swung from every corner leaving pieces of flesh and puddles of blood on the streets of Omonia in Athens Greece. The Sudanese and Somalians shocked the greek community to their very bones as they killed each other with reckless crudity. It was a scene that could have easily beffited the 3rd Century when barbarism was at its peak.



Thursday 18 September 2008, by Konye Obaji Ori


The Somalians and Sudanese in Greece are notorious for their drug dealings and Omonia is where they base. Both communities have shared the territory peacefully and dealt their custom mutually until last week.

Trouble began when more and more drug addicts began to take their customs to the Somalian side of the dangerous Omonia area to the probable envy of the Sudanese dealers. As the trend continued, the Sudanese asked the Somalians to leave Omonia. Their odacious demand must have offended the Somalis so much that they returned the request with action.

That Afternoon, as business went on, the Somalians appeared in the Sudanese occupied area of Omonia in a cohort, armed with machetes, axes, clubs and cutlasses. Their Sudanese counterparts soon armed themselves in defence and the bloody and barbaric altercation ensued. They cut, axed and chopped themselves to shreds.

The story self explained what the wars in Africa were all about. The Greeks were left to curse the hearts and reasoning of Africans as the fighting gave them more grounds to build on their racism, prejudices and xenophobia.

Police came at last after the streets had been redesigned with pieces of flesh, puddles of blood and dead bodies. Arrests were made, and the area was declared ’a no go area.’

From the ravages of war they came and they were given solace and refuge abroad. And it appeared last week that those Africans (Somalis and Sudanese) still haven’t learnt that war, especially amongst a people, only hurts them, makes them weaker and smaller in status.



Your opinion

Be the first giving your opinion




 
   

The challenge of changing the face of Ethiopia

South Africa 2010: Beyond a third adventure for Siasia’s eagles

All articles related to Opinion editorial

Student deaths caused by botulism in Uganda confirmed

Tanker carrying 2m barrels of oil hijacked by Somali pirates

Landmark Vasco Da Gama monument in Kenya threatened

All articles related to East Africa

Zanu PF defends Tsvangirai’s secret European visit?

EU undermining African economic stability

Greece to extend residence permits for foreign students

All articles related to European Union

Somali gov’t expresses gratitude for international involvement in fight against pirates

Another UN Aid worker killed in Somalia

Somalia threatens Kenya

All articles related to Somalia

Kenya slams Egypt and Sudan over Nile agreement

China to do more business with Sudan despite threats

Sudanese president still legally free

All articles related to Sudan

 
 
afrik.com    web
 
DR Congo    Conflicts    Nigeria    Technology    Uganda    Health    Finance    International    Somalia    Crime    Saudi Arabia    Botswana    Zimbabwe    Diplomacy    Zambia    Politics    European Union    Kenya    Culture    Libya    Mauritania    Governance
 


About us - Contact us/Privacy policy - Partners - Advertising guide - Syndication
Site map - Press review - Text mode - Map of africa - Archives - E-mail alerts - French version

© afrik.com