13 March, 2012

British government deports about 120 Nigerians ......

British government deports about 120 Nigerians from the United Kingdom over alleged immigration offences


UK Border
About 120 Nigerians have been deported by the Home Office from the United Kingdom over alleged immigration offences. Some of the offences include the lack of valid papers and stay permit. Those deported were said to have arrived at Nigeria’s Murtala Muhammed International Airport, MMIA, in  Lagos on board a chartered cargo aircraft in the early hours of Friday – this was to aviod undue attention. Reliable sources intimated that the deportees were mainly young men and women who were angry for being repatriated to Nigeria unprepared. Nigeria’s Saturday Vanguard newspaper reported that most of the deportees wore woe-be-gone looks on arrival made frantic telephone calls, apparently to their friends and relatives with a view to picking them up at the airport, even as they moved their luggage packed in some Ghana Must Go bags from the cargo wing of the airport into the main gate.
According to local reports, scores of airport workers stopped by to chat with the deportees, as some of them narrated their experiences, saying they had nothing to fall back on in a country they left several years ago. One of the deportees, Mr. Wale, blamed the Nigerian government for his predicament as well as his other colleagues, stressing that if the country’s  economic situation were pleasant, Nigerians would not have any business traveling abroad to humiliate themselves in a bid to survive. Wale said : “ How do I cope now that we have been sent home unprepared?” Another deportee, a young lady said, “ I am not interested in discussing why we were brought back home, but my problem now is how to get out of this international airport without drawing unusual attention. I must add that it is not a pleasant experience.” However, some car hire operators tried to make brisk business from the deportees as they lined up at the main entrance of the cargo terminal trying to ferry those willing to their respective destinations amid tight security.