Tag: Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora

  • Buhari: I’ll not complain again about Nigeria’s problems 

    ….Excited with Nigerians’ resilience in Poland

     

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Sunday promised that he will no longer complain about the problems his administration met on ground at the inception of the current administration.

    According to him, lamenting over Nigeria’s history of corruption and mismanagement of resources has not helped his administration much.

    Read Also:2019: Buhari remains unbeatable candidate – Bindow

    The President spoke during his interactions with Nigerians at the Kraków Holiday In, Poland, an event put together by Abike Dabiri, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, as part of his engagements on the sidelines of the global summit on Climate Change, taking place in Poland.

    Instead of complaining, he said that he will face the challenges head on.

    He said “We inherited so many problems, actually l have said l will not complain because l asked for it. I tried to become President three times and l lost, but l was lucky the fourth time, l became one, so l can’t complain”

    “Who asked me to do it again? Three times l ended up in the Supreme Court. The third time, l said God dey and the fourth time, God and technology, using the Permanent Voters Card and the Card Readers, they couldn’t rig the elections, so l won,” he added.

    Buhari also expressed delights at the resilience of Nigerians in Poland, which he said has helped them maintain good relationships with their host communities despite such cases of hostilities and racial discriminations.

    The President was earlier briefed about the challenges Nigerians face in Poland as well as their relative good behaviors despite the high level of hostilities and discriminations faced in Poland, compared to the stories about how Nigerians behave elsewhere.

    The President had in his usual frankness during the interactive meeting told his audience that he will attempt to respond to the questions raised by them, even though they may not be satisfied with his responses.

    “You may not be satisfied with my answers, but l will be very sincere with you, as l keep trying to do with all our people where ever they are”

    The President, while speaking on security, said he has always taken security as his number one priority, because of the understanding that investments drive will be useless without first securing the environment.

    “It just makes sense. You have to secure our country or even the institutions, or environment to manage it properly. If they are not secured, you are wasting your time. So, security has always been our number one priority”

    “Those in the North East will tell you that before we came, the so called Boko Haram used to hold about 17 local government, now, physically, they are not holding any local government, so they have resulted to real Gorilla tactics of hit and run.

    “They mobilize, hit targets and then disappear again because they know the area more than the Soldiers that are defending them. Our Soldiers are from Port Harcourt, Lagos, Sokoto, but they are locally there and know the terrain more than the Soldiers.

    He lamented that “it is not easy financing the war against terror”

    Earlier, the Nigerian Ambassador to Poland , Eric Adagogo Bell-Gam, while giving his welcome remarks, had revealed that quit a number of Nigerians in Poland were stable professionally and have what they are doing in that country.

    He also noted that there are quit a large number of Nigerians studying in Poland because of the relative cheap nature and quality of their educational system, comparable to anywhere in the world.

    The Ambassador lamented however, that Nigerians were like other non- Polish citizens, subjects of racial discrimination, as “ according to him, “ there is a very high problem of animosity, dislike for foreigners”

    “Even in Nigeria, we have this spectacular problem if getting Visas from their Embassy there. I used to ask them, you want to improve relationships with Nigeria, yet you don’t want our people to come. How do we improve.

    “From my perspective, l do not know about others, l found them a little bit less friendly to us, than my encounters in other parts of the world where l have been lucky to serve.

    Despite these however, Nigerians in Poland, he said “have been able to persevere, like the strong spirited people that they are, in spite of all the provocations, sometimes unwarranted, but l must say that a lot of our people here are living above board. Nigerians here have made us proud.”

    Among the Nigerians who met President Buhari were Adekunle Ayoola, a produce merchant, promoting Nigeria agricultural produce in Europe, based in Poland, Larry Ugwu, an Artist and Curator, who has lived in Poland for 40 years and has contributed immensely to promoting Nigerian cultural heritage in the Polish society; Anthony Egwuatu, a Gynaecologist, who has lived in the country for 30 years, Olomofe Larry, a human rights activist, who has fought for justice for fellow Nigerians in the host country, among several others.

    The President was accompanied to the event by Governors Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, Yahaya Bello and Abubakar Sani Bello of Enugu, Kogi and Niger States, respectively.

    Others on his entourage include the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, the Minister of Water Resources, Suleiman Adamu, and the Minister of Environment, Ibrahim Jibrin and the National Security Adviser, Babagana Mongonu.

  • FG evacuates 1,030 stranded Nigerians from Libya in 2 days

    FG evacuates 1,030 stranded Nigerians from Libya in 2 days

    The Federal Government on Monday said it evacuated 1,030 stranded Nigerian migrants from Libya between Jan. 7 and Jan 8, 2018.

    Alhaji Mustapha Maihaja, the Director-General of National Emergency Management Agency, disclosed this at a joint news conference by the Federal Government delegation to Libya.

    Foreign Affairs Minister, Geoffrey Onyeama, had on Jan. 5 led a delegation on a fact-finding mission to Libya to secure the release of Nigerian migrants stranded in that country.

    The delegation comprised of Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora and Muhammad Babandede, Comptroller General of the Nigerian Immigration Service.

    Others were Julie Okah-Donli, Director General of National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons and Sadiya Umar-Faruq, Federal Commissioner, National Commission for Refugees.

    Maihaja told newsmen that the returnees were — 485 — who came back on Sunday and 545 who came back on Monday, noting that they were part of the 5,037 stranded Nigerians identified for evacuation back home.

    He stated that a reception centre approved by President Muhammadu Buhari had been set up in Port Harcourt, Rivers for the returnees.

    According to him, the returnees on arrival will be formally received and profiled before being transported to their various states.

    He said that the reception centre was organised in such a way that the Ministry of Health provided facilities to look after those with health-related problems.

    He explained that those who were critically ill were taken to University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital for treatment.

    He added that the returnees would be profiled through the Immigration, Directorate of State Service and other agencies, emphasising that those with criminal tendencies and ISIS inclination would be taken
    care of by relevant agencies.

    Maihaja said the delegation had 21 days to complete its operation.

    The Foreign Affairs Minister also said the delegation was in Libya to engage with Libyan Government at the highest level to facilitate the evacuation of the stranded Nigerian migrants from the North African country.

    Onyeama said the Nigerian mission in Libya was coordinating the identification of the Nigerian migrants with the support of International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

    According to him, they are being joined by a technical team comprising representatives from NEMA, Immigration and other relevant Nigerian government agencies.

    The minister said that the political and security challenges in that country made it difficult to secure the evacuation of some Nigerians back home.

    He added that “there are different centres of power in that country. The central government recognised by the UN and AU do not have full control of the territories controlled by rebels.”

    He pointed out that there were over 50 detention camps in Libya, many of them under the control of rebels and militia groups.

    The minister said that the young Nigerians being trafficked were shattered and battered and seen as a commodity to be traded for economic gains.

    He said the Libyan Government blamed the criminal elements for the human trafficking business, noting that the president was keen at dissociating the ordinary Libyan people from the narrative.

    He noted that there were complaints about how some migrants in detention camps were being exploited by government officials for economic gains.

    He said Nigerians who were residing in Libya legally complained of harassment by Libyan Government officials who they said destroyed their passports and other residency papers.

    The NAPTIP Director-General said the agency would profile the returnees to identify those who were real victims of trafficking.

    Okah-Donli said “the returnees would be counselled by trained personnel and those with a medical condition would be treated at the agency’s facilities.”

    She said the rehabilitation period would last for six months during which the returnees would be trained on different skills acquisition and empowered with tools.

    “We will monitor them for about two years to ensure that they don’t re-embark on the treacherous journey,” she added.

  • Deportation of Nigerian refugees worrisome – Dabiri-Erewa

    Deportation of Nigerian refugees worrisome – Dabiri-Erewa

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Friday gave Cameroun a thumps down for the  alleged deportation of over 100,000 Nigerians  from that country.

    Dabiri-Erewa in a statement by her media assistant, Abdul-Rahman Balogun, called the deportation of the Nigerians who fled their homes to escape the Boko Haram insurgency as worrisome and inhuman.

    She said that Cameroon should heed the UN’s call on all countries to protect refugees fleeing the carnage in the North-East of Nigeria and not to return them there.

    “This unfriendly attitude of the Cameroonian soldiers to Nigerian asylum seekers is really worrisome,’’ Dabiri-Erewa said.

    She appealed to Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and other West African regional groups to prevail on Cameroon to be “their brothers’ keeper in a situation like this’’.

    She said that deportations, according to Human Rights Watch, defied UN refugee agency’s plea not to return anyone to North-East of Nigeria until the security and human rights situation had improved considerably.

    The presidential aide said that a 55-page Human Rights report entitled “They Forced Us onto Trucks like Animals: Cameroon’s Mass Forced Return and Abuse of Nigerian Refugees,” condemned the act.

    The report, according to her, states that since early 2015, Cameroonian soldiers had tortured, assaulted, and sexually exploited Nigerian asylum seekers in remote border areas.

    She said that the report added that the soldiers also denied the Nigerians access to the UN refugee agency, and summarily deported, often violently, tens of thousands to Nigeria.

    “It also documents violence, poor conditions and unlawful movement restrictions in Cameroon’s only official camp for Nigerian refugees as well as conditions recent returnees face in Nigeria,’’ she said.

    Dabiri-Erewa said that Cameroon’s forced returns breached UN principles, which prohibited forceful return of refugees and asylum seekers to persecution and, under regional standards in Africa, to situations of generalised violence such as in Nigeria’s North-East.

  • FG consoles with victims of US Hurricane Harvey

    FG consoles with victims of US Hurricane Harvey

    Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora has commiserated with victims of the recent Hurricane Harvey in Houston, USA, especially Nigerians living there.

    In a statement Tuesday by her Media aide, Abdurrahman Balogun, she expressed concern about the damage done to the homes of those living in that area thus rending thousands homeless.

    With over four million estimated Nigerians living in the US, Dabiri-Erewa stated that statistics show that Houston hosts one of the highest community of Nigerians in that country.

    It must be noted that at the very least 80 per cent of Nigerians resident in places like Galveston, Cypress, Houston and the Bayou area have had their properties and personal belongings damaged.

    There was a case of a rescued Nigerian from Akwa Ibom state on Monday by speed boat having lost his car, home and personal belongings

    “This is to send my  heartfelt concern to Nigerians living in Houston, and indeed all residents affected by Hurricane Harvey. It is really sad and disturbing”.

    Dabiri-Erewa, however, called on Non- Governmental Organisations, corporate bodies as well as well-endowed individuals  to join in raising funds for victims of hurricane Harvey in Houston.

    “We should always be our brothers keepers and lend a helping hand as we are now one big global family”, Dabiri-Erewa pleaded.

    She commended the efforts of the US government in giving succour to the victims of the Hurricane Harvey in Houston and pray unto God to protect those living there.

  • Don’t take drugs, kola nuts to Saudi Arabia – Dabiri-Erewa

    Don’t take drugs, kola nuts to Saudi Arabia – Dabiri-Erewa

    Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora has charged intending Muslim pilgrims on the need to stay on the side of the law.

    Dabiri-Erewa warned yet to depart for 2016 Hajj exercise to resist any temptation to take hard drugs to Saudi Arabia, reminding them that it attracts death penalty. The Saudi Arabian authorities have asked Nigerian pilgrims not to bring kola nuts during the 2016 Hajj.

    More than 70,000 Nigerian pilgrims are expected to perform 2016 Hajj. Since the beginning of transportation of pilgrims to Saudi Arabia in Aug. 15, more than five Nigerians have been arrested for alleged possession of substance suspected to be hard drugs as well as kola nuts.

    The presidential aide in a statement by her Special Assistant on Media, Abdur-Rahman Balogun, said that despite repeated warnings and workshops for intending pilgrims, it is disheartening that some Nigerians still ran foul of Saudi Arabia authorities’ law.

    She reminded the pilgrims that some Nigerians caught with hard drugs in the last few years are still currently on death row in Saudi Arabia, pleading with pilgrims to shun the shameful act.

    Dabiri-Erewa also reminded the pilgrims that kola nuts and prescription painkillers in large quantities have been banned in Saudi Arabia, and if found, attracts severe penalties according to new Saudi Arabia regulations.

    She said the Federal government through the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) and various state boards has made adequate arrangements to attend to the medical needs of the pilgrims in Saudi Arabia.

    Similarly, she said the Saudi authorities have free medical centres in all the nooks and crannies of the Kingdom equipped with all drugs for their medical needs.
    She urged the security agencies and other para-military stationed at the various departure centres in Nigeria to screen the pilgrims before their departure to Saudi Arabia.

    “All those who intend to perform Hajj are therefore advised to adhere strictly to the Saudi rules and regulations on prohibited items,” NAHCON said in a statement.

    The Nigerian Hajj commission also urged Muslim Pilgrim Welfare Boards (MPWB) and licensed tour operators to properly educate pilgrims to avoid penal actions on those found in violation of the instruction on smuggling kola nut. Violators will be punished in accordance with the laws of the Kingdom.

    This caffeine-based edible seed, the kola nut, is usually known as “Goro” and “oji” and often used ceremonially by Nigerians to show a gesture of friendship and warmth; it is also used in the production of beverage and energy drinks.

    Dabiri-Erewa advised Nigerian pilgrims to be good ambassadors of the country by portraying Nigeria in good image and pray for peace, unity and progress of the country in the Holy land.