Tag: Abike Dabiri- Erewa

  • 128 Nigerian migrants perish in Mediterranean Sea — Dabiri-Erewa

    128 Nigerian migrants perish in Mediterranean Sea — Dabiri-Erewa

    No fewer than 128 Nigerians were among the over 576 West African migrants to Europe that recently died in the Mediterranean sea, a government official said in Lagos on Tuesday.

    The Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Diaspora Affairs, Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, disclosed this at the public presentation of two books “From Libya with Tears’’ and “Practical News and Feature Writing’’ in Lagos.

    The books were written by Mr Dele Bodunde, who retired as a Managing Editor/Director in NAN on Tuesday at the attainment of 60 years.

    Dabiri-Erewa, represented by her Special Assistant on Media, Mr Abdul-Rahman Balogun, said most of the victims were heading to Italy en route the Libyan coast when the tragedy occurred.

    She described the incident as unfortunate, saying the story was one too many and that it highlighted the desperation by some Nigerians to travel to Europe at all costs, despite the high risks.

    “Just some days ago, 128 Nigerians died in the Mediterranean sea out of 576. Most of them were from West African countries and they were on their way to Europe.

    “Now, this is an unfortunate incident and I think it is better to remain in Nigeria and keep struggling, instead of making desperate journeys that could take their lives,’’ the presidential aide said.

    Dabiri-Erewa said some Nigerians had been trapped in Libya and were subjected to various inhuman treatments and that only the intervention of the Federal Government had ensured the return of many.

    She said that the German Embassy in Nigeria had intimated her office on plans to repatriate no fewer than 12,000 Nigerian asylum seekers from the European country.

    The Presidential aide commended Bodunde for writing a book on the travails of Nigerians in Libya, saying the work could not have come at a better time.

    Also speaking at the occasion, a former governor of Ogun State and a veteran journalist, Chief Olusegun Osoba, said there was the need for journalists to constantly update themselves with the requisite skills of the profession.

    According to Osoba, the main problem to the development of the profession is a deficit in skills.

    He commended the author for writing a book that sought to address the problem and urged practising and aspiring journalists to avail themselves of the books, for their professional and personal development.

    In his speech, the Managing Director of NAN, Mr Bayo Onanuga, described the retiring director as an accomplished journalist, who had made a great impact at the agency.

    Onanuga, who was represented Mrs Kate Popoola, Head of NAN Lagos Operations, said he was not surprised with the books as the author had a penchant for imparting knowledge.

    “I urge journalists who desire more knowledge on the job to make use of the materials for their professional development,’’ he said.

    The Book Reviewer, Mr Ade Obisesan, described the book “From Libya with Tears’’ as an eye opener, as it highlighted the travails of Nigerian girls trafficked to Libya.

    Obisesan said the book was beautifully written and reflected the writer’s hatred for anything that dehumanises the female child.

    Bodunde thanked the guests, as well as the staff and management of NAN for the opportunity to serve the nation.

    He promised to continue to contribute his quota to the journalism profession, even in retirement.

  • Immigration: Presidency advises Nigerians to delay travel to U.S.

    Immigration: Presidency advises Nigerians to delay travel to U.S.

    The Federal Government on Monday advised Nigerians who have no compelling or urgent reason to travel to the U.S. to postpone their travel plans until the new administration’s policy on immigration is clear.

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora Abike Dabiri-Erewa gave the advice in Abuja.

    Dabiri-Erewa in a statement by her media aide Abdurrahman Balogun, said that the warning became imperative due to series of reports received by her office.

    “In the last few weeks, the office has received a few cases of Nigerians with valid multiple-entry U.S. visas being denied entry and sent back to the Nigeria.

    “In such cases reported to the office, such affected persons were sent back immediately on the next available flight and their visas were cancelled.

    “No reasons were given for the decision by the U.S. immigration authorities,” she said

    She, however, reminded Nigerians in the Diaspora to abide by the rules and regulations of their host countries and be good ambassadors of the country.

    NAN reports that Nigeria was not among a group of countries from which Trump wants to suspend travel to the U. S. on security grounds.

    President Donald Trump is to sign a revised executive order to “clarify who is covered” under a policy that halted entry to the U.S. from several Muslim countries, White House Adviser, Kellyanne Conway said on Monday.

    Conway said that there would be “a new executive order” to take effect March 16, and that Iraq was no longer included “based on their enhanced screening and reporting measures.”

    The document would replace an order in late January that temporarily banned tourist, immigration and most other entries from seven majority-Muslim countries from entering the U.S. for 90 days.

    Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen were the former countries that were affected by the initial order.

    The order caused travellers to be stranded at different international airports around the world and set off a wave of protests.

    It was later blocked by a court.

    The January order also suspended the U.S. refugee programme for 120 days and indefinitely blocked refugees from Syria.

    Under the new order, Syrian refugees “are treated the way all refugees are,” and it makes “much clearer if you have travel docs, if you actually have a visa.

    “If you are a legal permanent resident, you are not banned under this particular executive action,” Conway said.

    Earlier on Monday in Baghdad, the Iraqi Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Jamal said the ministry voiced “deep relief” at press reports that Iraq would not be on the new banned list.

    He described the anticipated move as “an important step in the right direction in order to consolidate the strategic alliance between Baghdad and Washington in many areas.

    He pointed out that the relationship between the two countries most importantly the war on terrorism. (NAN)

  • More Nigerians to return from Libya

    More Nigerians to return from Libya

    The Presidency on Friday said another 180 Nigerians are expected back in Nigeria from Libya on Tuesday.

    The returnees will be the third batch of Nigerians to be ferried back to the country from Libya in the last one month.

    At least 171 Nigerians returned on January 21 while 161 returned on February 14.

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, spoke at the Presidential Villa while receiving the Federal Commissioner, National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons Commission, Sadiya Farouk.

    Dabiri-Erewa said the Federal Government was expecting more migrants back in the country with the current happenings around the world.

    The presidential aide said her office would be working with the Commission to sensitise Nigerians on the need to stay away from some countries.

    She said, “Your visit is timely because we expect more migrants back home. In fact, 180 Nigerians are expected back from Libya on Tuesday.

    “With what is going on around the world, it is going to be worse. We will work with your commission to continue to sensitise Nigerians on the need for them to know that some places are not just worth it.”

    Speaking earlier, Farouk commended Dabiri-Erewa for her efforts toward ensuring that Nigerians in diaspora are treated with dignity.

    She condemned the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa and pledged her commitment to moves to end such unwarranted attacks.

    Farouk promised to work with Dabiri-Erewa to educate Nigerians on the dangers of irregular migration.

     

  • 41 trafficked Nigerian girls evacuated from Mali

    The Federal Government on Monday evacuated 41 Nigerian girls who were trafficked to Mali for forced labour and sexual exploitation.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that six persons, alledged to be human traffickers, were also arrested and brought back to the country alongside their victims.

    The Hercules C-130 military aircraft, with registration number NAF 913, conveying the returnees landed at 7:45 pm at the Airforce Base of the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos.

    They were brought back by the Nigeria Air Force in collaboration with the Office of the Senior Special Assistant, Diaspora and the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP).

    They were received at the Hajj Camp area of the airport by officers of the NAPTIP and the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS).

    Addressing newsmen, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, commended the Chief Of Defence Staff, for facilitating the return of the victims to the country.

    “We want to thank the Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshall Sadique Abubakar, and the Chief of Defence Staff, Maj Gen. Abayomi Gabriel Olonisakin, for making the return of the girls possible, otherwise they would have still be there.

    “The girls came back voluntarily. Some of these girls are between 15 and 17 years old who thought they were being taken to Europe for greener pastures but ended up with traumatic experiences in the hands of their traffickers and their madam.

    “So they should not be ashamed of themselves because they are victims. We are going to rehabilitate them through skills acquisition programmes. I am therefore calling on non-governmental organisations to join us in this regard,” she said.

    Dabiri-Erewa advised Nigerian parents to watch their children carefully and ensure that they don’t succumb to peer pressure and other activities that could exposed them to traffickers.

    She confirmed that six of the alleged traffickers, who were arrested and brought back to the country, would be handed over to the appropriate authorities for prosecution.

    According to her, the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration remains committed to the welfare of Nigerians all over the world, hence this intervention.

    Also speaking, Mr Joseph Famakinwa, Zonal Commander, NAPTIP, South-West Zone, said 512 victims were returned to the zone in 2016.

    Famakinwa said Nigerians needed to go back to the basics of bringing up their children uprightly and discouraging the ‘get rich quick’ syndrome.

    He said poverty was not solely responsible for the increase in the human trafficking, stressing that other factors such as negligence, peer pressure and greed were also responsible.

    “Once the girls have been rescued, we take them to our shelter houses where they are received by trained counselors who assist them in overcoming their trauma.

    “After counseling, for those who don’t want to go back to school, we give them a vocational training of their choice and also assist them to set up their businesses.

    “We also meet with their families to let them know that being victims of human trafficking is not the end of the world and advised them on how to render support to the girls,” Famakinwa said.

    He said NAPTIP would reveal the identities of the suspected traffickers in due course and ensure that they are brought to justice. (NAN)

  • 171 more Nigerians return from Libya with tales of woes

    171 more Nigerians return from Libya with tales of woes

    No fewer than 171  Nigerians voluntarily returned from Libya on Tuesday aboard a chartered Nouvelair aircraft with with tales of woes.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the aircraft landed about 4.18pm at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos.

    NAN reports that another batch comprising  161 Nigerians, had earlier on Feb. 14 also voluntarily returned from the North African country where they had been stranded enroute Europe.

    The new set of returnees were brought back by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and the Nigerian Embassy in Libya.

    They were received at the Hajj Camp area of the airport by officers of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) , the National Agency for the Protection of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and the Police.

    Also on ground to receive them were officials of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN).

    Air Commodore Salisu Mohammed, Director,  Search and Rescue, NEMA, who gave a breakdown of the returnees, said they were made up of of 49 males, 109 females, seven children and six infants.

    Addressing newsmen, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, commended the IOM for facilitating the return of the Nigerians.

    She said : “Like I told them, they are not criminals.These are people that have gone in search for greener pastures. However, it turned out to be a terrible experience for them.

    “They shouldn’t be ashamed of themselves. Now they are back home and Mr President has personally conveyed his greetings to them and to let them know that they are back in Nigeria and there is no better time than now.

    “Times are tough, things are difficult but your country is the best place to be. ”

    According to her, the Federal Government, IOM and some states have put up programmes in place to rehabilitate Nigerians who volunteered to return from Libya in order to reintegrate them into the society.

    “The question is, how long are we going to keep evacuating them? So there is going to be another evacuation and a final one when we will tell Nigerians who are stranded in Libya to come back home.

    “After that it will be difficult getting IOM to do the evacuation.

    “A lot of them don’t know where they are going to. There is a lot of ignorance here. Some of them are trafficked and they get there with nothing.

    “The message here is that illegal migration is not worth it because as tough as the country is today, you are better off here than being in those places,” Dabiri-Erewa said .

    She reiterated the government’s committment to the welfare of Nigerians all over the world, stressing that it was currently addressing the issue of xenophobic attacks on Nigerians living in South Africa.

    The senior special assistant described the attacks as shameful, noting that it was wrong to generalise Nigerians in the country as criminals.

    One of the returnees, Miss Gift Peters said she got to Libya 11 months ago after being deceived that she was being taken to Germany.

    “When I got to Libya, it was not in my mind to continue with the journey. So I asked the person that took me to return me to Nigeria but he started maltreating me and sold me to someone who has a connection house in Libya where we were maltreated daily.

    “If we don’t want to work, they will start maltreating us. They will do you something that you will wish to die.

    “Those who they sold us to, sometimes, use iron and start burning us. At times, they will instruct our fellow ladies to urinate for us to drink,” the Delta State indigene said amidst tears.

    According to her, she managed to eventually contact her family in Nigeria and was fortunate to make it back alive unlike many of her peers who joined her on the ill-fated journey. (NAN)

  • FG warns Nigerians to avoid Libya

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, has warned Nigerians to avoid Libya.

    Dabiri-Erewa also warned against illegal entry to Libya, noting that such immigrants to the country when caught and convicted were placed on death penalty, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    The Presidential aide said this in a statement made available to journalists in Abuja on Monday.

    She was reacting to a video and pictures being circulated on the purported killing of black immigrants in Libya.

    “While the authenticity of the pictures and tapes in question cannot be verified, it is a known fact that Libya has been executing alleged black illegal immigrants for years,” NAN quoted Dabiri-Erewa as saying in the statement.

    “As the chairman Committee on Diaspora in the House of Representatives in the Seventh Assembly, we intervened in the case of 24 Nigerians about to be killed in Libya.

    “The committee, in collaboration with SERAP, an NGO, petitioned the UN, AU, ECOWAS, and Ghadaffi yielded to pressure and released them.”

    She said about two months ago, the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) alongside the Nigerian Embassy in Libya, evacuated more than 2,000 Nigerians from Libya.

    The presidential aide said the Nigerian Embassy in Libya, in collaboration with NEMA have relentlessly intervened in cases involving Nigerians in Libya and will continue to do so.

  • FG warns Nigerian migrants to avoid Libya

    FG warns Nigerian migrants to avoid Libya

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Abike Dabiri-Erewa has warned Nigerian migrants to avoid Libya.

    Dabiri-Erewa also warned against illegal entry to Libya, noting that such immigrants to the country when caught and convicted were placed on death penalty.

    The Presidential aide said this in a statement made available to the newsmen in Abuja on Monday.

    She was reacting to a video and pictures being circulated on the purported killing of black immigrants in Libya.

    “While the authenticity of the pictures and tapes in question cannot be verified, it is a known fact that Libya has been executing alleged black illegal immigrants for years.

    “As the chairman Committee on Diaspora in the House of Representatives in the Seventh Assembly, we intervened in the case of 24 Nigerians about to be killed in Libya.

    “The committee, in collaboration with SERAP, an NGO, petitioned the UN, AU, ECOWAS, and Ghadaffi yielded to pressure and released them,” she said.

    She said that about two months ago, NEMA alongside the Nigerian Embassy in Libya, evacuated more than 2000 Nigerians from Libya.

    According to her, the Nigerian Embassy in Libya, in collaboration with NEMA have relentlessly intervened in cases involving Nigerians in trouble in Libya and will continue to do so.

    Dabiri-Erewa said “Libyans are dealing with their own struggles as there is no recognised government in place’’.

  • Pension for Nigerians in the Diaspora, good omen – Dabiri-Erewa

    Pension for Nigerians in the Diaspora, good omen – Dabiri-Erewa

    The  Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, has described the proposed pension scheme for the Diaspora pensioners as a good development and unique in Nigerian history.

    Dabiri-Erewa said this in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja by her media aide, Mr Abdur-Rahman Balogun.

    Dabiri Erewa commended unique efforts by the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) to include Nigerian pensioners in the Diaspora in the nation’s pension scheme which she said, had never happened before.

    “This is unique in the history of Nigeria as nobody has deemed it fit to capture the data of Nigeria pensioners in the Diaspora,’’ she said.

    According to the presidential aide, the measure will save the Nigerian pensioners abroad the trouble of coming and going back for the collection of pension.

    “The introduction of the scheme is an interesting news to the Diaspora and we will work with our pensioners in the Diaspora because they deserve to receive their pension after meritorious service to the country.

    “Am sure this will go a long way to show that this administration cares for all Nigerians, either at home or in the Diaspora.

    “We will look forward to capturing every Nigerian in Diaspora who had served the country,” Dabiri-Erewa said.

    The Executive Secretary of PTAD, Mrs Sharon Ikeazor, had on Tuesday said the agency was proposing pension scheme that would capture Nigerians in the Diaspora who had served their country diligently.

    Ikeazor said the directorate would commence pension scheme for the Nigerians in the Diaspora who had served the country before travelling abroad.

    “They are our heroes and heroines who had worked for this country since independence and there is need to capture them in our pension scheme through verification and updating our database,’’ she said.

    She explained that the Diaspora pensioners were Nigerians who worked in the country and due for pension but did not collect their pension before going abroad.

    She said the directorate would partner the office of SSA to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora to enable it to capture pensioners in the Diaspora to have their accurate database.

  • FG condemns killing of Nigerian in S/Africa

    FG condemns killing of Nigerian in S/Africa

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, has described the latest extra-judicial killing of a Nigerian in South Africa as “worrying and condemnable”.

    Dabiri-Erewa in a statement in Abuja on Monday said the latest gruesome killing of Tochukwu Nnadi by Police in South Africa, was unacceptable to the people and government of Nigeria.

    The statement was signed by her Media aide, Mr Abdur-Rahman Balogun.

    She reiterated President Muhammadu Buhari’s calls to Nigerians to avoid crimes like drug peddling which attracts stiff penalties, sometimes death.

    The Presidential aide noted that the killing of Nnadi had brought to 20 Nigerians killed in South Africa through extrajudicial means in 2016 alone.

    While appealing to Nigerians to avoid crimes, Dabiri-Erewa said the extra judicious killing of Nigerians is condemnable and unacceptable.

    “The barbaric behaviour of the perpetrators is not only unacceptable but also calls for urgent attention by diplomatic authorities in Nigeria and South Africa,” she said.

    Dabiri-Erewa urged the South African Government to ensure that justice prevails by carrying out investigation and bring the culprit to book.

    She reiterated her calls to Nigerians living abroad to always respect the laws of their host countries and be good ambassadors of Nigeria.

    She recalled that a Nigerian based in South Africa, Tochukwu Nnadi, was allegedly choked to death by the Police in South Africa on Thursday, Dec. 29, after he was arrested for allegedly selling drugs.

    According to eyewitnesses, the man, popularly known as King Kingsley, was not struggling after he was arrested and handcuffed, but one of the officers held onto his neck and squeezed tightly until blood started gushing out.

    “My heart goes out to the families of the deceased and pray God to grant the departed soul eternal rest,” the SSA prayed.

    Meanwhile, the Nigeria Union in Pretoria had confirmed the latest killing.

    The Secretary of the union, Mr Adetola Olubajo, told newsmen in Pretoria that “the Nigeria Union is calling on the Nigerian Mission to demand results of investigations of all murder cases involving Nigerian victims from the South African authority’’.

    Olubajo said that the union was not happy that all murder cases involving Nigerians in South Africa were never resolved.

    In the year 2016 alone, it has brought to 20, the number of Nigerians killed in South Africa under such cruel circumstances.

    Among such victims were Ikejiaku Chinedu, Monday Okorie, Gideon Ogalaonye, Nnamdi Michael, Adeniyi Olumoko, Christian Onwukaike and Tochukwu Nnadi.

    Nigerians are perennial victims of the xenophobia in South Africa, with Nigerians losing more than 4.6 million Rand or N90 million during the last attacks.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that about 150 South African business organisations are currently operating in Nigeria, despite the former’s allegedly restrictive policies, which have made it difficult for Nigerians to invest in that country.

  • Diaspora Nigerians ‘remitted $35b home’ in 2016

    Diaspora Nigerians ‘remitted $35b home’ in 2016

    Nigerians living abroad remitted over $35 billion back to the country in 2016, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora Matters, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, said on Tuesday.

    She stated this during her visit to the executive members of the Federal Inland Revenue Services (FIRS).

    Dabiri-Erewa said, “In 2016 they remitted $35 billion which is higher than what was remitted in 2015. This remittance by Nigerians living abroad is the highest in Africa and the third largest in the world.”

    The former House of Representatives member also drew the attention of the FIRS team to tax concerns raised by Nigerians in diaspora.

    She added: “There is a lot of talk about your organization from Nigerians in diaspora concerning taxes whether there will be taxes incentives for Nigerians coming back home to engage in agriculture and other businesses. What are the plans and projects for them? Recently they expressed concern over reports that we need to pay tax on our passports.”

    “Both the FIRS and my office need to communicate with Nigerians in diaspora. There should be collaboration between both offices to disseminate information in case they have questions or want answers.”