The Nigerian Mafia: Mumbai

An Excerpt

by Chandra Sundeep
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I recently read The Nigerian Mafia: Mumbai by Onyeka Nwelue. Set in Mumbai, the story offers an insight into the lives of a select group of Nigerians living in India. 

Here’s an excerpt from the novel.

India is not an easy place. Maut kee tarah, we say in Hindi. Like death. We all know India is not the Americas or Australia  and that, no matter how much one wishes, Mumbai cannot change and become Washington. You probably wonder why I moved here then.

Nigeria was calmer, yet unsettling. It was like a content wife who occasionally gazed through the window. You see, I was always staring through my life’s window. I was always looking towards America and her promise of a transformed, novel life. I was also looking towards Australia and its cold receptiveness and marble-tiled promenades. But it is not very easy to get an American or Australian visa, and the thing that keeps us pressed to look out was ever there—a strong sense of
desperation that filled us, that made us restless. The wish to get out stretched improbably, and it didn’t specify a soft landing.When I thought of India, I said, “Well, India is great too,” with a certain forced admiration, almost as if trying to convince myself anywhere was better.

You see, I came to look for opportunities in India. Since America proved difficult to access and anywhere else in Europe, the UK, for example, was inscrutable. But I had to become somebody in life, and outside of Nigeria was the best chance I could get. Or so I thought. If India was hell, Mumbai was a broader version of it. The moment I came out of the airport in
Mumbai, I sensed a faux air of indecisiveness beginning to hover above me like a dark cloud. A handful of it gurgled down my throat. It made me cough.

“Are you okay, Sir?” a police officer asked. I did not need to reply. I was pensive all through the ride from the airport, managing to ditch the red-faced and betelnut-chewing taxi driver who said he would take me anywhere for a small fee. But I ended up walking off, along the busy highway, dialling Stephen.

It was an impulsive thing to do. Yes, I knew Stephen was in prison in Goa. He must be sucking stale beans with salty tap water. But I called his number still, hoping against hope. “He could pick,” I muttered. “I just need to dial long enough.” I think I called for several minutes, about two hours I think, my feet itching, and finally sitting down in a tea shop where everybody probably spoke Marathi as Stephen had told me earlier.

What had he done to land himself in an Indian prison?

A Goan prison was not an everyday prison for petty thieves: once you go there, you become alone in the world. Your friends are the first people to delete your number from their contacts. Then your enemies are next, they post contents on their social media and tag you. They think you ended up in a Goan prison because you were being punished by whatever god they worshipped. And what led to that end wouldn’t matter because you are already within the four walls, and you can’t justify
yourself anymore. Then your family, they cry for the first few weeks, then they leave you. Just like that, I tell you. No one, everybody knows, goes into a Goan prison without investigation. Everybody fears investigation.

You become shit.

 

This post is part of the book tour organized by The Bookbots and Keemiya Creatives.

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