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South Africans Protest Against Burna Boy, Say They Don’t Want Him In Their Country

South Africans Protest Against Burna Boy, Say They Don’t Want Him In Their Country

Some set of people in South Africa who are under the aegis of Tshwane Collective have sent a petition to the minister of arts and culture, kicking aga

Some set of people in South Africa who are under the aegis of Tshwane Collective have sent a petition to the minister of arts and culture, kicking against the inclusion of Burna Boy in two concerts scheduled for 23 and 24 November.
This objection has come as a result of the tweet Burna Boy posted on Twitter during the Xenophobic attack on foreigners in South Africa by South Africans where he said he would never step a foot in South Africa ever again. It appears the “African Giant” has now been booked for a show in the country and some South Africans truly want him to abide by that tweet as they don’t want him in their country.

They wrote; “He promised to never set a foot in SA again until the government “wakes the f*ck up and really performs a miracle.”

What do you think about this development? Should Burna be allowed to perform or not?

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South African artistes protest against Burna Boy Some artistes in South Africa under the aegis of Tshwane Collective have sent a petition to the minister of arts and culture, kicking against the inclusion of Burna Boy in two concerts scheduled for 23 and 24 November. The Africans Unite concerts, a response to recent xenophobia in the country is organised by Play Network Africa, based in Nigeria, in partnership with Phambili Media SA and appears to enjoy the support of South Africa’s department of arts and culture. It will feature, along with Burna Boy, artistes such as Kwesa and Jidenna. The first concert will hold at Hillcrest Quarry in Cape Town on 23 November and the second at Sun Arena, Time Square in Pretoria. But the Tshwane Collective questioned the exclusion of local artists and Burna Boy’s invitation to perform at the concert, accusing the African Giant of inciting hatred against South Africa, in the wake of the xenophobic attacks. “Whoever may have deemed that the country needs a PR exercise of this nature would have done so largely as a result of the callous, misleading and unwarranted incitement by this very artist. Not only did he spread falsehoods through his extensive platform, he literally incited violence and hate. He further promised to inflict his own violence on locals before giving your government an ultimatum which you seem to have received and succumbed to”, the group said in the letter to Nathi Mthethwa, minister of art and culture. Truly, in a series of tweets in September, Burna Boy urged black foreigners living in SA to defend and protect themselves against xenophobic attackers. In a now deleted tweet, he also told SA rapper AKA to beef up his security, before giving him the middle finger. He promised to never set foot in SA again until the government “wakes the f*ck up and really performs a miracle”. Burna Boy, unaware of the protest, announced on 9 November he will contribute a portion of the proceeds from the concert to the victims of xenophobic attacks. “I really hope we can all keep contributing in our own way to make the world a better and safer place for each other. Africans unite, it’s bigger than all of us,”

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