Tag: Turkey

  • Istanbul attack suspect identified

    Istanbul attack suspect identified

    Turkish authorities have identified the man suspected of gunning down 39 people at a nightclub on New Year’s Eve in Istanbul, a state media reported on Wednesday.

    Mevlut Cavusoglu, Foreign Minister, said in Istanbul that the identity of the attacker was known, without giving further details.

    The report noted that his comments came hours after the agency reported that five suspects linked to Islamic State had been detained as part of the ongoing investigation.

    They were reportedly being held in Turkey’s coastal city of Izmir.

    Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack, in which partygoers, many of them foreign nationals from the Middle East, were killed while ringing in the New Year at Istanbul’s upmarket Reina nightclub.

    The report said further that the number of people held in connection with the attack now stands at 43, including the wife of the suspected attacker.

    However, the main suspect remains on the run.

  • Kyrgyzstan working with Turkey to identify Istanbul attacker

    Kyrgyzstan working with Turkey to identify Istanbul attacker

    Authorities in Kyrgyzstan are in “constant contact’’ with Turkish investigators to help identify the main suspect in the Istanbul nightclub attack, following media reports that he may hail from Central Asia.

    “In connection with the possible involvement of a citizen of Kyrgyzstan, representatives of the state committee for national security are in constant contact with Turkish authorities,’’ the committee’s Rakhat Sulaimanov said.

    One man had been questioned, Sulaimanov said, but “there is no evidence of his involvement in a terrorist act’’.

    He was released after questioning, but the investigation was ongoing, Sulaimanov said.

  • UN Security Council adopts Syria ceasefire plan

    UN Security Council adopts Syria ceasefire plan

    The UN Security Council on Saturday unanimously adopted a resolution welcoming and supporting the efforts by Russia and Turkey to end violence in Syria and jumpstart a political process for the war-torn Middle East country.

    “The draft resolution has been unanimously adopted as resolution 2336,” President of the Security Council for December, Roman Marchesi (Spain) said, according to a document obtained by the Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) at the UN.

    Also in the resolution, the Council “takes note of” the documents issued by Russia and Turkey about the agreements the two countries have brokered, including a nationwide ceasefire and a plan to convene political talks in Kazakhstan’s capital, Astana, between the Syrian Government and opposition groups, in January.

    The Council “looks forward to” that meeting in Astana, viewing it as “an important part of the Syrian-led political process” and “an important step ahead of the resumption of negotiations under the auspices of the United Nations in Geneva on Feb. 8, 2017”.

    Western members of the SecurityCouncil had sought changes to the draft resolution circulated by Russia and Turkey during consultations on Saturday morning to clarify the role of the UN and the meaning of the agreement brokered by Moscow and Ankara.

    The final text dropped an endorsement of the Syria cease-fire agreement brokered by Moscow and Ankara, and it changed the draft to call the Astana meeting “an important step ahead of the resumption of negotiations under the auspices of the United Nations in Geneva on Feb. 8, 2017”.

    On Friday, Russian Ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, said Moscow hoped the Security Council would take up a vote and unanimously adopt a draft resolution on Syria, which was based on talks and documents issued in Astana, Kazakhstan on Thursday.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin had also announced on Thursday that the Syrian government and armed opposition groups had reached an agreement on a nationwide ceasefire in Syria and on readiness to start peace talks.

    Putin called on the Syrian government, armed opposition and all countries with influence on the situation in the Arab republic to support the reached agreements and to take part in the anticipated talks in Astana.

    A nationwide ceasefire between the Syrian government and opposition factions came into force at midnight on Friday.

    Russia and Turkey serve as guarantors of the ceasefire deal, which paves the way for negotiations between the warring parties.

    Russia and Turkey are on opposing sides of the Syrian conflict, with Moscow along with Iran providing crucial military support to Syrian President Bashar Assad, while Turkey has long served as a rear base and source of supplies for the rebels.

    Divisions in the Security Council between veto-wielding members of the Security Council – Russia and China on one side and the Western powers: the U.S. Britain and France who support the moderate opposition and demand that Assad steps down, on the other side — had blocked action to end the war.

    Russia and Turkey first sent the cease-fire agreement and the draft resolution to Security Council members on Thursday night.

    After closed discussions at the Council on  Friday morning, Churkin, Russia’s Permanent Representative, circulated a revised draft, urging Council members to support it and called for the vote on Saturday.

    The Security Council needs to participate “in this important process,” Churkin had said.

    The cease-fire agreement, if it holds, would mark a potential breakthrough in a conflict that began in 2011 with an uprising against decades of rule by Assad’s family and has left over 250,000 dead and more than 13.5 million people in need of urgent assistance, and triggered a refugee crisis across Europe.

  • Terrorism trial of Turkish novelist, others begins

    Terrorism trial of Turkish novelist, others begins

    A Turkish novelist Asli Erdogan and eight others went on trial on Thursday on terrorism charges.

    The defendants have been charged with membership in the banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which Turkey considers a terrorist organisation.

    Erdogan worked with Ozgur Gundem, a Kurdish daily shuttered by the government in August for alleged links to the PKK.

    Born in 1967, Erdogan is a rights activists, novelist and columnist.

    If convicted, they could face life imprisonment

  • U.S to close mission in Turkey Tuesday

    U.S to close mission in Turkey Tuesday

    U.S. Embassy in Ankara on Tuesday issued a statement saying that U.S. mission to Turkey will be closed.

    According to the statement, an individual approached the U.S. Embassy Ankara main gate and discharged a firearm.

    There have been no reported injuries and the individual is in police custody.

    “Due to this incident, the U.S. Embassy in Ankara, the U.S. Consulate General in Istanbul, and the U.S. Consulate in Adana will be closed for normal operations on Tuesday,’’ the statement said.

    The U.S. Mission also reminded U.S. citizens to review personal security plans, ensure communication connectivity and maintain a high level of vigilance and take appropriate steps to enhance personal security.

    “I condemn in the strongest terms the heinous attack on Ambassador Karlov,’’ U.S. Ambassador to Turkey John Bass twitted on Monday.

    The Arts and Culture Centre of the municipality of Ankara’s Cankaya district, where the Russia Amb. Andrei Karlov was shot dead on Monday, was only 50 metres to the U.S. Embassy.

    Meanwhile, the U.S. Consulate in Adana informs U.S. citizens that general demonstrations are expected to take place between Ataturk Park and Adana’s Central Train Station on Tuesday afternoon.

    The participants were expected to demonstrate against recent violent terrorist attacks throughout the country and against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

    The report says previous such demonstrations in other cities also included anti-American messages, even demonstrations intended to be peaceful can turn confrontational and escalate into violence.

  • Our three-month ordeal in Turkey’s maximum prison -Nigerian students detained over coup saga

    Sent to Turkey for university education by parents who wanted the best for them, two young Nigerians recall the horror of being bundled into Silivri Maximum Security Prison where they joined Turkish military personnel, civil servants, professionals and other suspects detained over alleged involvement in Turkey’s July 15 military coup. They are among scores of Nigerian students who came home without being allowed to collect their graduation certificates, academic transcripts, electronics and other items which the Turkish authorities said they would return only after the completion of investigation early next year. They spoke with Assistant Editor, JIDE BABALOLA, in Abuja. 

    It was almost four months since Mohammed Abdullahi and Hassan Danjuma Adamu were detained by security agencies in Turkey in the wake of a military coup that rattled the country in July this year, but they still appeared somewhat dazed by the experience. The two Nigerian students were picked up from their hostels and detained for three months in Turkey’s maximum prison over their alleged involvement in the aborted military coup of July 15, 2016.

    Although they are happy to be home, the two young men, who grew up in homes where moral and religious instructions predominate, are still enmeshed in confusion. They had travelled to far away Turkey dreaming to complete their education, after which they will undergo the compulsory one-year national youth service and begin earning a decent living and making their families proud. On the contrary, however, they found themselves in handcuffs, dumped at Silivri Maximum Security Prison.

    In the aftermath of the July coup, the Turkish government had launched a crackdown that led to the imposition of an emergency rule, which in turn hardened the climate of official impunity. While the Turkish Justice Minister, Bekir Bozdag, has fiercely denied widespread allegations of abuse of detainees amid mounting criticism from Western governments and international rights groups, the European Commission’s annual progress report concerning Turkey’s increasingly unlikely membership in the European Union (EU) alleges unjust treatment of randomly detained persons.

    “There were reports of serious human rights violations, including alleged widespread ill treatment and torture of detainees. The crackdown has continued since and has been broadened to pro-Kurdish and other opposition voices,” the commission alleged.

    New York-based Human Rights Watch’s most recent report basically agrees with EU’s observations, citing at least 13 credible cases of torture since the attempted coup. And the Turkish press is scarcely documenting the alarming spike in allegations of ill-treatment, as most critical outlets have been shut and many critical journalists locked up on the flimsiest of terror charges.

    The two young Nigerians tasted a bit of this at a time when Hakan Cakil, Turkish Ambassador to Nigeria, said reports of Nigerians arrested in his country were exaggerated, insisting that Nigerian students were safe.

    Then, there was the issue of the Muhammadu Buhari administration’s refusal to accede to the Erdogan administration’s request that Nigeria should shut down schools linked to followers of Muhammed Fethullah Gülen, the US-based Turkish preacher, former imam and writer, who was once a critical ally in facilitating Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s political success.

    Mohammed Abdullahi, who studied Mathematics and Computer Science at Bahçeşehir University in Istanbul, Turkey told The Nation his story when asked to explain how he got ‘involved’ with the July coup.

    He said: “I was sleeping soundly in my hostel when the constant noise of helicopter propeller in the sky woke me up. I did not even have the faintest idea that something like a coup was going on in the city. I only got to know about it from the updates that some friends were adding on Facebook.

    “Later, on July 28, the person that sweeps the apartment that we were living in reported to the police that the building belongs to the Jamaat (linked to the Hizmet movement, followers of Gülen’s doctrines) which was branded as an armed terrorist group by the police. So, the police came and took us to the police station, we were interrogated but there was nothing found on us.

    “The next day, they took us directly to the court, and from court, they took us to prison straightaway. We were in the Maximum Security Prison for three months and were not allowed to see anyone except for those of us who had family members around. It was after one and a half months that someone came from the Nigerian Embassy. He talked to us and assured us that they were working on our issue and Alhamdulillah, we are out now.

    “We were detained with soldiers and other civilians who were also accused (of involvement in the coup), and there were people with different cases. In our own case, the allegation was that we were members of an armed terrorist group,” he stated.

    The Nation learnt that the ‘crime’ of the students, which turned them into ‘suspects’ for the Turkish authorities was probably that of living in a hostel that belonged to the Hizmet movement, which is now labelled an “armed terrorist group” in spite of its dependence on intellectual debates, humanitarian activities, quality education and inter-religious dialogue to galvanize people.

    “Thus, we were ‘suspects’. Right now, our computers, phones and our electronics are with them. They said we should wait till January 10 when the emergency situation will be over, and then they will send them to us.

    “In the prison, they normally brought lunch and dinner, and there was hot water for some hours in the day time. There was a canteen, and we wrote if we wanted to buy something from the canteen. They would bring the list and the price tags for you.

    “I was lucky I had some money, so we were able to survive on that throughout our stay there.

    “Officials at the Nigerian Embassy in Turkey tried their best and even our friends outside too, even though I do not know what exactly each person did to draw attention to our plight. You can’t imagine how happy we were when a Nigerian embassy official came. Before then, for two good months, my friend and I were only seeing and interacting with the Turkish ‘suspects’,”

    Recalling his own experience, Hassan Adamu said: “We were there for three months but were allowed to call our families just once. It was really difficult because I had never imagined myself in prison. I am a student. My father sent me to Turkey to study and then this happened.

    “On the 15th of July, that was when it happened. I was actually going to play football because my friend invited me. I went to my hostel to dress up and go to the field but suddenly realised that I forgot my glasses and the house key in school,” he said as he explained the genesis of his troubles.

    Having grown up in a home where much premium is placed on good behaviour, diminutive Adamu, who can be easily mistaken for a secondary school student, still feels some nightmares and psychological trauma.

    Although he was only waiting to collect his graduation certificate and study transcripts after completing his bachelor’s degree in Computer Studies at Bahçeşehir University in Istanbul, Yobe State-born Hassan Adamu was arrested by the Turkish police on July 28.

    “It is true that I was really scared and we were in a police cell for 14 days before we were taken to a stinking prison with no proper ventilation, where we met several Turkish soldiers and other professionals accused of involvement in the coup,” he said.

    Although there was not even a tiny shred of evidence to implicate Hassan and Mohammed, those who arrested them found no need to give any specific explanation to justify the broad accusation levelled against the Nigerian students. Briskly, they were made to pass through the rounds at the court and then taken in handcuffs like every other suspect to Silivri Maximum Security Prison.

    Officially known in Turkish as Silivri Ceza İnfaz Kurumları Kampüsü, the approximately 11, 000 capacity prison, according to www.wikipedia.org, is a high-security state correctional institution complex in the Silivri District of Istanbul Province in Turkey.

    “Covering an area of 437,000 m2 (4,700,000 sq ft) and stretching over 955,354 m2 (10,283,340 sq ft) land, the prison complex is composed of nine blocks, one open and eight L-type closed correctional institutions having a total capacity for 10,904 inmates,” it stated in its description of the state of the facility in 2008 when it was completed.

    According to Hassan Adamu, some of the prison officials made futile recommendations that security agents should rather deport the students as the facility was not meant to accommodate foreign prisoners. “They made us to do frog jump, and hit us in the back in the process,” he recalled.

    According to the somewhat shy young men, soldiers and civilians accused of coup plotting along with convicts with various criminal career backgrounds populate the prison. “There were many people accused of committing various offences. Our own case was that we were members of (Fetullah Gülen) Armed Terrorist Group because of the school and hostel we lived in.

    Founded by Enver Yucel, who was President of the World Education Entrepreneurs Association, President of the European Test Preparation Center Union and also a member of the Board of Trustees of New York University’s Steinhardt School Dean’s Council; the Bahçeşehir Uğur Education Foundation, which runs Bahçeşehir University, was once accused by some online groups of being part of the Gulen Charter Schools USA agenda to “dominate education worldwide”.

    Enver Yucel had great success in increasing the number of educational institutions to 200, currently providing education to more than 150,000 students worldwide. In 1994, Mr. Yücel established Bahçeşehir K-12 Schools, which provide ‘an intensive, comprehensive and analytical education to qualified, multilingual, analytical thinkers as graduates’.

    Furthermore, in 1998, he established Bahçeşehir Uğur Education Foundation (BUEF), which provides educational funds to students who are studying at Uğur Education Institutions or other such institutions, but who do not have sufficient financial resources to continue their education.

    Notwithstanding such aims and the benefits to Turkish citizens and others around the globe who enjoy scholarship and the benefits of quality education, all such pro-Gülen educational organisations, including the ones established in Nigeria have been branded as enemies by the Turkish government. Hence, the abortive request that President Buhari should help cripple such ventures by closing down the schools immediately.

    “I have never heard that the Turkish schools in Nigeria have done anything illegally since the time they began operation in Nigeria; I attended one of such excellent schools so, I see no reason why the school should be closed.

    “Rather, I want President Muhammadu Buhari to take serious action over how Turkish authorities treated Nigerians who were studying there. Apart from us, they deported about 50 students and most of these students were not even allowed to take their transcripts.

    “President Buhari should not let the matter die like that. He should take serious action,” Mohamed said.

    In spite of their horrible experience, which runs contrary to their parents’ expectations, the two young men may still have cause to thank God that their ordeal ended after three months. Reports indicate that pregnant Buket Buyukcelebi, a female researcher at Kilis University, who was sacked and jailed three months ago under an emergency decree, most likely over alleged links to Gülen, is being held in an overcrowded Gaziantep prison with her 13-month-old son.

    Some 20 other detainees suspected of links with Gülen are said to have committed suicide in suspicious circumstances and the Turkish press reported that an engineer accused of leaking state secrets on behalf of Gulen, was found dead in his cell in Kirklareli prison on November 10.

    Altogether, www.turkishpurge.com which has been keeping tabs on verifiable aspects of the crackdown that followed the July military coup in Turkey states that 105, 097 have been sacked, 76, 485 suspects are being detained, 2, 099 schools, dormitories and universities have been shut down while 6, 337 academics have lost their jobs, 3, 640 prosecutors and judges have been dismissed with 186 media outlets shut down and 144 journalists arrested.

    “In any case, we are just happy to be back home in our country, Nigeria,” Hassan said.

  • 1.2m metric tonnes of poultry products smuggled into Nigeria annually – PAN

    The Poultry Association of Nigeria (PAN) has given 1.2million metric tons as the estimated volume of poultry products smuggled into Nigeria annually.

    PAN President, Dr. Ayoola Oduntan, gave the figure in Lagos Thursday.

    Nigeria, according to him, is losing about N700 billion annually in revenue to smuggling of poultry products.

    According to him, the smuggled products, which are majorly frozen chi‎cken and turkey, have great health impact on the well-being of Nigerians.

    He regretted that the government is yet to compensate  farmers who suffer  losses as a result of  cooperating with the government to destroy the affected birds.

    He informed that poultry farmers lost millions from the destruction of birds confirmed to have been infested with bird flu.

    As a result of this, he said the affected famers have not been able to restock. Eggs prices, he noted, will continue to go up with increasing prices of the key feed components.

    According to him, rising feed costs have affected the costs of egg production from increased demand for corn and soyabean supplies.

    Export of corn and soya beans following the increased world demand for feed grains have resulted in unprecedented feed price increases beginning from last year.

    Oduntan the prices of maize per tonne has risen to N120, 000 while that of soyabeans has gone up to N145, 000.

    The prices were N60, 000 and N80,000 respectively two years ago.

    As a result of these increased feed ingredient prices, production cost per dozen for egg producers,he  explained have  increased.

    The increased costs in feed ingredients, he added, have resulted in cumulative costs for egg producers during the past two years. Given the projected demand for corn is likely to increase in future years and  depreciation of the naira, the PAN boss said these factors will continue to pressure poultry producers’ costs and profitability numbers making feeding efficiencies even more important.

    Oduntan noted that the association will not relent in its efforts and focus on policy, advocacy and institutional linkages that will put poultry production on the path of excellence.

    He however, announced its National Poultry Show scheduled between November 29 and 30 at Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital.

     

  • PRE-SEASON: Ifeanyi Ubah to tour five foreign countries

    PRE-SEASON: Ifeanyi Ubah to tour five foreign countries

    The Management of FC Ifeanyi Ubah have concluded plans to embark on a two-week European tour of five countries – United Kingdom, Greece, Spain, Portugal and Turkey.

    The planned tour is a move to prepare the team for next season’s Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL), Federation Cup and CAF Confederation Cup campaigns.

    The Anambra Warriors won the 2016 Federation Cup final after beating Nasarawa United 5-4 on penalties.
    However, management has approved and released cash reward (winning bonuses) for the players, management and the supporters club to appreciate them for their commitment and determination throughout the season and the eventual Federation Cup triumph as follows:
    a) N10, 000, 0000 for the footballers.
    b) $10,000 for the Head Coach/Technical Director, Mitko Dobrev and Assistant Coach, Rafael Everton.
    c) N3, 000,000 for the management and coaching staff.
    d) N2, 000,000 for the supporters club.
    The management has also approved a minor reorganization in the top level of the coaching staff aimed at repositioning the team.
    In this regard, management announced the appointment of Kenichi Yatsuhashi, a Japanese-American and former Head Coach of Accra Hearts of Oak as the new Head Coach of FC Ifeanyi Ubah.

    He holds a USSFA and National Youth Coaching licence, a CONCACAF Internatonal Coaching licence, an NSCAA Goalkeeping Diploma and a KNBV Advanced Diploma, IFA GK Certificate and FIFA and FIFA/AFC Grassroots Certificate.
    The board also appointed Mr Yaw Preko as the new Assistant Coach/Physical trainer of the Club. Yaw Preko joins Fc Ifeanyi Ubah from Accra Hearts of Oak where he was acting Head Coach. Yaw Preko is also currently the Acting Head Coach of Ghana’s national Team (Black Stars of Ghana) and a former top striker in Turkish football club, Fenerbahce S.K.
    Similarly, management promoted its Bulgarian Head Coach, Mitko Dobrev to the position of the Technical Director of the Club.
    On another note, following the successful utilization of the N100,000,000 war chest handed down to the team by the Management during the mid season, the management is pleased to announce the approval and release of the sum of N150,000,000 to the club for the enhancement of the club, signing of additional players and vigorous preparation for next seasons.
    The road show, presentation of the cup to the people of Anambra State and official unveiling of newly appointed technical officials will take place on the 16th of November, 2016.

  • Time to call Turkey’s President to order 

    SIR: Events that continue to unfold in Turkey aftermath of the failed coup in that country have not ceased to bleed my heart as no day will pass without incident of arrest or detention of Turkish people and sometimes foreigners, like in the case of some Nigerian students.

    Since the failed coup, thousands of civil servants have been dismissed, scores of  media outlets shutdown,  hundreds of judges sacked, academics booted out from their universities, doctors, journalists, rights activists have not also been spared of this massive onslaught  by Turkey’s President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    The attention of the international community, especially  that of the United States, the European Union, the Africa Union  is highly needed to prevail on President Erdogan to respect the rights of the Turkish people.  A failed coup should not be a licence to suppress opponents, suffocate perceived enemies or arrest innocent people.

    So far, nearly 100,000 persons are in detention and 37,000 arrested  all because of  suspected links to US-based Islamic cleric, Fethulah Gülen, whom Erdogan fingered for  the failed coup despite the denial by the highly-respected cleric.

    President Erdogan through his actions and body language is fully determined to crush anything or anybody that is perceived to be sympathetic to Gulen, and in the process continues to trample on the basic rights of the Turkish people and gags the media.

    Just few days ago, Turkey’s secularist Cumhuriyet  newspapers’ daily Editor-in-Chief, Murat Sabuncu and columnist Güray Öz were detained after police raided their residences.

    Though some international rights organisations have already voiced their condemnation over the blatant crack down on the rights of the people in that country, it is high time more pressure is mounted on Erdogan to purge himself of his tyrannical posture and respect the rights and freedom of the Turkish people.

     

    • Usman Dikko,

    Kaduna.

  • Our students in Turkey

    Our students in Turkey

    •Nigeria must not allow any intimidation of its citizens

    The detention of Nigerian students in the wake of the July 15 attempted coup d’etat in Turkey is the culmination of decades of Nigerian diplomatic ineffectiveness and must be corrected without delay.

    The Turkish government’s heavy-handed response to the coup has been shaped by its suspicion that it was masterminded by US-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gulen with whom it has long had a poor relationship. The clamp-down involved the arrests of thousands of soldiers, journalists and civil-rights campaigners, the closure of over 2,000 schools, dormitories and universities, as well as demands that Turkish schools and businesses outside the country run by Gulen’s Hizmet movement be shut down.

    Nigerian students studying in Turkey have been detained in airports after being interrogated like criminals. About 50 of them were detained in Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport for 11 hours; some were deported, even though they were bona fide students who were yet to complete their studies.

    The Federal Government must respond to this palpable injustice as strongly as possible. Turkey has every right to get to the bottom of the coup, but that does not give it the right to mistreat the nationals of other nations who are in the country legally.

    The unfairness of the treatment meted out to the Nigerians can be seen in the discriminatory way in which it was applied; there are no reports of American, British or Chinese nationals detained or ill-treated in the same manner.

    Turkey’s targetting of Nigerian students may be its response to Nigeria’s refusal to close down schools and businesses allegedly owned by the Hizmet movement in Nigeria. When the demand was first made, Nigeria’s response was that it would investigate the issue, but would not close the schools merely on unproven allegations. It appears that the Turkish government was not satisfied with this eminently reasonable reply, and has gone ahead to take its ire out on innocent Nigerian students in its country.

    The Federal Government must not allow this to stand. Nigeria and Turkey have long had cordial relations, strengthened by religious, commercial and other ties. Both nations regard each other as viable partners in the attainment of their legitimate economic and socio-political goals. The occurrence of a coup in one nation should be no reason to mistreat the nationals of the other who are residing in that nation.

    If Turkey has incontrovertible proof that Turkish citizens resident in Nigeria are involved in matters incompatible with their diplomatic or residential status, they should provide it rather than seeking to intimidate the country into doing its bidding. Nigeria should formally protest to Turkey over its behaviour towards its citizens and warn that it will no longer permit it to continue without commensurate consequences.

    This affair does not portray the Nigerian diplomatic mission in Turkey in good light, either. What was the embassy looking at while those whose interests it was supposed to protect were treated with flagrant disregard for their inalienable rights? When the detained students inevitably got in touch with the embassy, what steps were taken to resolve the matter?

    A thorough investigation must be carried out into the way in which the Nigerian embassy in Turkey responded to the detention and deportation of Nigerian students. Those who are found to be culpable should be sanctioned in accordance with laid-down rules.

    Henceforth, greater emphasis should be on appointing seasoned professionals to diplomatic postings, as opposed to politicians and non-career diplomats. There should be zero tolerance for the maltreatment of Nigerians in Turkey and elsewhere in the world, no matter what they are accused of. It is time for the vaunted change mantra to manifest itself in the country’s diplomatic relations.