Tag: Nigerians

  • Exercise more patient with me in fight against corruption – Buhari begs Nigerians

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday solicited the support of Nigerians in the ongoing fight against corruption in the country.

    The president promised that the war against corruption will be prosecuted with the highest regard to due process and respect for human rights.

    According to a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, the President spoke at a meeting he had with religious leaders in Kano, on Thursday, in the course of his two-day state visit.

    “When I came in uniform as military Head of State, we locked every suspect in Kirikiri prisons until they proved that they were not guilty.

    “Under the constitution, everyone is innocent until proven guilty. That is the constitution and we will abide by it,” the President was quoted as saying.

    Buhari was also reported to have reaffirmed his support for the proposed anti-corruption courts.

    He said to strengthen judicial integrity and the rule of law, such courts must be manned by “incorruptible judges.”

  • Many Nigerians in Libya don’t want to return-FG

    A number of Nigerians in Libya do not want to return home, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama has disclosed.

    The minister stated this on Wednesday while addressing State House correspondents after the Federal Executive Council meeting.

    Onyeama said the Nigeria’s Charge D’Affairs in Tripoli had been invited to Abuja to give full details of the imprisonment of Nigerians in various detention centres in Libya

    He said once the government gets number or Nigerians in Libya’s prisons and all other facts, it would meet with National Emergency Management Agency and the NAPTIP on how to evacuate them.

    The minister said the evacuation would be done in co-ordination with International Organisation for Migration “and see if we can very quickly repatriate all our Nigerian nationals who are there who want to return home.

    “The charge d’ affairs said a number of Nigerians (and not all of them) do not want to come home. Certainly, it has to be those who want to come back home.”

  • More Nigerians return from Libya

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, on Tuesday joined officials of some government agencies as they received a fresh set of Nigerians flown home from Libya.

    TheNewsGuru reports that no fewer than 144 Nigerians voluntarily returned home aboard a chartered Buraq Airlines aircraft with registration number 5A-DMG.

    The aircraft landed at about 6.45pm at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos.

    The returnees were assisted back by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and the European Union (EU).

    TNG reports that the Wife of the Governor of Lagos State, Mrs Bolanle Ambode, who represented the Wife of the President, Haija Aisha Buhari, was also present at the Hajj Camp area of the airport as the Nigerians returned.

    The South West Zonal Coordinator of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Alhaji Suleiman Yakubu , who gave a break down of the returnees, said they were made up of 97 males, 39 females, two children and six infants.

    Addressing newsmen, Dabiri-Erewa, commended the IOM for facilitating the return of the Nigerians.

    She, however, noted that there was need to keep the tempo of awareness high in order to stop Nigerians from embarking on the perilous journey in search of greener pastures in Europe.

    One of the returnees, Mr Godsent Jatto, from Edo State, told NAN that he had a harrowing experience in Libya after being sold into slavery by fellow Nigerians.

    He said :”I am so happy coming back to Nigeria. I will never dream in my life to pass through Kano to Libya again”.

    Jatto said it was sad that some Nigerians also lured their fellow brothers to Libya only to get them into human trafficking.

    He said some were sold to the Arabs who will now start calling the Nigerians’ families in the village demanding for money for them to be released.

    According to him, traffickers usually lie to people back in Nigeria that their relatives have crossed to Europe whereas some of them have drowned in the Mediterranean Sea.

    “My advice to Nigerians that still want to embark on this journey is that they should not try it. Keep doing anything you are doing here because your country is your country,” he said.

    Another returnee, Ms Caroline Ishola, an aspiring actress from Ekiti State, described her journey to Libya as a misadventure.

    Ishola said: “My experience was bad. It is a very dangerous country. I was an actress before embarking on this journey and I paid the person who took me N400, 000 at first and paid more when I got to Libya.

    “I was sold in Libya but thank God it was not into a connection house and at the end of the day the place was raided by the Police and we were arrested and that was how I got back.”

    The fresh returnees came back days after a batch of 150 Nigerians voluntarily returned on Nov. 30 from the volatile North African country where they had been stranded enroute Europe.

    Before then, many had also been assisted back home in batches.

    As at the time of filing this report, another batch of Nigerians was being expected from Libya as their aircraft was said to be on the way from Tripoli

  • FG identifies 2,778 Nigerians in detention camps in Libya, moves to repatriate 250 weekly

    The Federal Government says it has a record of 2,778 Nigerian migrants registered in “accessible” detention camps in Libya, ready for repatriation.

    The Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in a statement signed by the Spokesperson Mr Tiwatope Elias-Fatiile on Tuesday, said the country’s embassy in Libya had been visiting detention camps to identify Nigerians for registration.

    The ministry stated that those registered were issued Emergency Travel Certificates.

    The ministry also explained that the embassy in collaboration with the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) repatriates 250 migrants weekly and had returned 3,000 of them so far.

    “From the 2,778 registered Nigerians who are still in detention camps, another set of 250 Nigerian migrants will be arriving on Tuesday Dec. 5, at Murtala Mohammed Airport, Lagos at 7.00.p.m. to be received by NEMA officials.

    “The Embassy, in collaboration with the IOM repatriates 250 Nigerian migrants by flight to Lagos weekly – each flight can accommodate only 250 passengers.

    “The repatriation is a continuous exercise and the Embassy routinely issues the requisite travel documents to the migrants.

    “The Embassy will continue to engage the legitimate government in Libya and other stakeholders in addressing the plight of Nigerian migrants in that country.”

    The Ministry further said that the Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama had invited the Nigerian Embassy’s Head of Mission, Mr Iliya Fachano, to Abuja for consultations.

    “He is in Abuja already and during the period of the consultations, arrangements have been made for him to address press conferences on the issue.

    “This would afford the Nigerian public the opportunity to hear from him directly.”

    The ministry, however, advised intending Nigerian travellers to “avoid Libya at this period, because of the dangers they may encounter in the process of their journey”.

    The ministry also urged citizens to reach the Nigerian Embassy in Libya for assistance through these emergency numbers: +218910144487, +218925099384 and +218917953365.

    “The contact email addresses for the embassy and the ministry are: nigeria@nigeriantripoli.org and help@foreignaffairs.gov.ng.

    It said that the embassy had received requests for intervention from some relations of the victims based in Nigeria through these contacts.

    While condemning the slave market in Libya, the ministry said it would engage the UN, African Union, European Union and other stakeholders to ensure that the perpetrators were brought to justice.

    “It violates the fundamental human rights of the victims and it is unacceptable to the civilised world.”

     

    NAN

  • US offers free treatment for 720,000 HIV victims in Nigeria

    US offers free treatment for 720,000 HIV victims in Nigeria

    The United States Government has offered to treat over 720,000 Nigerians living with HIV for free.

    This was revealed in a statement by the Acting Public Affairs Officer of the US Consulate General, Lagos, Kevin Krapf.

    Krapf said this in his speech in commemoration of the 2017 World AIDS Day which held at the Lagos State University College of Medicine.

    Speaking on the theme, “Increasing impact through transparency, accountability and partnerships,” Krapf also said in 2017 alone, about four million Nigerians had received free HIV counselling and testing services through the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

    He said the gestures were a reflection of the US government’s “longstanding” leadership in addressing global HIV/AIDS spread and increasing its impact in controlling the epidemic.

    Krapf also said its HIV prevention messages and activities had reached over 300,000 people identified as “most-at-risk,” while about 50,000 pregnant women had received antiretroviral drugs to prevent mother-to-child transmission.

    He said, “According to the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, Nigeria has the second largest HIV epidemic in the world and has one of the highest new infection rates in sub-Saharan Africa.

    “Many people living with HIV in Nigeria are unaware of their status due to insufficient recommended number of HIV testing and counselling centres.

    “Low access of antiretroviral treatment remains an issue for people living with HIV in Nigeria and I welcome the new commitment of the Federal Government of Nigeria to use domestic funds to provide antiretroviral drugs to an additional 50,000 people living with HIV each year.”

    Stating that the latest PEPFAR data from its population-based HIV impact assessments showed that five high-burden African countries were already approaching the control of their HIV/AIDS epidemics, Krapf assured that the US government would continue to provide support to the Federal Government towards controlling the spread of HIV/AIDS among Nigerians.

    He said, “We are at an unprecedented moment in the global HIV/AIDS response. For the first time in modern history, we have the opportunity to change the very course of a pandemic by controlling it without a vaccine or a cure.

    “Controlling the pandemic will lay the groundwork for eliminating or eradicating HIV, which we hope will be possible through the future scientific breakthroughs which lead to an effective HIV vaccine and cure.”

  • Over 400,000 Nigerians, other nationals still stranded in Libya – AU Commission

    The Head of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, has said that over 400,000 Nigerians and others remain stranded in Libya.

    Hundreds of thousands more — “400,000 to 700, 000,” according to Mahamat — remain stranded.

    European and African leaders have set themselves a tall order to stamp out horrific abuse of African migrants, some of them are Nigerians in Libya, where thousands are suffering in a vast, lawless territory.

    On Thursday, a summit of the African Union and the European Union set a goal of immediately repatriating 3,800 migrants languishing in a camp near Tripoli.

    But experts pointed to a daunting array of hurdles, from extracting migrants in perilous situations to giving them incentives to stay put when they return home.

    Even so, the summit’s commitment, initiated by outrage over a CNN television report on black Africans being sold as slaves in Libya, is being welcomed.

    It is a step in the right direction,” International Organisation for Migration Europe Director, Eugenio Ambrosi, told Agence France Presse by phone from Brussels.

    It is a little bit too much to think it will solve the slavery issue, but it would definitely mitigate (it) to some extent,” Ambrosi said.

    He said the summit also showed there was now “international watchdog pressure” that could be brought to bear on the criminal gangs, but it must be “sustained.”

    The drive was announced at a meeting on the summit sidelines organised by French President, Emmanuel Macron.

    It brought together eight other EU and African countries as well as the AU, EU and United Nations representatives.

    Macron said the UN-backed Libyan government of Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj had identified and granted access to the worst camps to enable the returns of people who want to go home.

    The Macron group also decided to work with a task force, involving the sharing of police and intelligence services, to “dismantle the networks and their financing and detain traffickers,” he said.

    They pledged to freeze the assets of identified traffickers. The AU is expected to set up an investigative panel and the UN could take cases before the International Court of Justice.

     

  • 10,000 Nigerians die of cancer annually – Health Minister

    The Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, on Friday in Abuja said 10,000 people die annually due to agony and lack of basic equipment for treatment of cancer.

    Adewole said at the inauguration of the National Hospital’s Radiotherapy Centre with new Multilleave Lenear Accelerator for cancer treatment.

    He attributed the number of deaths to lack of necessarily equipment and resources to attend to cancer patients.

    The minister who described cancer as a worldwide disease that kill more people than the combination of Tuberculosis, infectious diseases and HIV, decried the lack of resources to cushion the effect of cancer.

    He said: “Base on the review of International Atomic Energy Agencies of all countries conducted in 2013 only South Africa and Egypt have the capability of treating cancer,” and described the situation as worrisome.

    Speaking on the inaugurated facility, Adewole commended the Wife of the Vice President, Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo, for her passion in addressing the plight of cancer patients,

    He emphasised that such passion had made it a reality for the centre to be operational and described it as a measure toward alleviating the plight of patients.

    Nothing the presence of one Multilleave Lenear Accelerator machine at the facility at the moment, he assured of increasing it to two in order to forestall challenges of patients in the event of breakdown of one.

    The minister pledged the Federal Government’s commitment to upgrade other seven cancer centres next year in order to minimise the burden of cancer and associated death rates in the country.

    What is important is that the machine has been put to work and upgraded and it is an opportunity for linking those network, treatment modalities that are new.

    Anybody coming to this centre will get the right treatment. With the right complaint, we will minimise our treatment damages to neighbouring organs so that we can be more precise with respect to treatment that we offer.

    We are making moves to have two new machines that can treat people and also pledge to complete this centre to become the first of its kind in Nigeria,’’ Adewole said.

    Adewole who noted the standard practice of one machine to one million people, emphasised that considering the population of the country, Nigeria required 200 of such machines across the seven cancer centres in the country.

    According to him, if such machines are in place they will adequately meet the challenges of the populace with regard to cancer care.

    Earlier, Dr Jafaru Momoh, the Chief Medical Director of National Hospital, said the radiotherapy unit which included women, men and children was first inaugurated in 2000.

    Momoh said it has been operational till February this year when it finally broke down due to overstretched among others.

    He noted that the new centre had facility for one CT Simulator and two Radiotherapy Bunkers.

    According to him, one multileave LINAC was procured in 2013 but was not installed until recently due to paucity of funds to procure the necessary CT simulators and accessories for the installation and inauguration.

    The new LINAC is the first of its kind in Nigeria, staff of relevant departments have been trained on its use.

    Additional support will be needed to complete the entire complex and provide the necessary equipment and relevant manpower to run it as a centre of excellence for cancer care,’’he said.

    Osinbajo, while inaugurating the facility, lauded the efforts of the hospital’s management for making the facility a reality.

    She described the death of 10,000 people to cancer as unimaginable and assured the hospital of the federal government’s support in making everything available to ensure quality service delivery in the facility.

    I looked forward to a day that the cure of cancer stand but I am happy that though the resources are limited but we are making steps, stride in the right direction.

    I see hope with the machine here and all other things to go. My appeal is for us to love Nigeria and for us to love Nigerians.

    I pray for us to respond to love Nigeria and respond to love Nigerians and the result will be a beloveth Nigeria.

    By risen of this building I see patients that are helped, loved ones of patients that are happy that we have a facility that they can use to help their loved ones out of sickness ,’’ she said.

     

    NAN

     

  • How we were abducted, sold into slavery by fellow Nigerians in Libya – Returnees

    Some fresh returnees from Libya have recounted their ordeals in the hands of fellow Nigerians who facilitated their sale to slavery in the troubled country.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that over 1,295 Nigerians were repatriated International Organisation for Migration in conjunction with the European Union in November alone.

    Since the beginning of 2017, IOM-facilitated repatriation has brought back 5,578 Nigerian migrants, who were trapped in and outside prisons across Libya.

     

    Some of the returnees who share their horrible experience said most of the kidnap kingpins in Libya were mostly Nigerians and they had no pity on them.

    One of them, 26-year-old Odion Saliu, a hairdresser from Edo State who spoke with The Punch said she was kidnapped and handed over to a Nigerian, who forced her to call her mother.

    According to her, her mother in Benin paid N200, 000 but she was again sold by the same Nigerian for 3,000 dinars (about N794, 000).

    Saliu explained that the Nigerians spoke Pidgin English and some Nigerian languages.

    She said, “When I was kidnapped with others and held for some weeks, the Arabs asked if I wanted to be taken to a Nigerian and I readily said yes. I was very happy that I was going to someone from my country. But it was a lie.

    The Nigerian they took me to locked me in a cell and told me to call my mother and ask for N60, 000. The man said he would sell me to a connection house if my family did not get the money. I called to inform my mother and the trafficker who facilitated my journey from Nigeria.

    But the trafficker spoke with them on the phone and told them the amount they demanded was too small. They increased it to N200, 000. My mother paid into an account after they provided her with the account number over the phone.

    The Nigerian said if I wanted to cross the sea, I had to pay him again. But when we got to the seaside, he sold me again.”

    Another Edo State indigene, Sunday Anyaegbunam, left Nigeria along with his wife in April.

    He said during their nine-day journey through the desert, they were sold twice by Nigerians.

    According to him, when their Nigerian “burger” (trafficker) sold them to another set of Libyan traffickers at Agadez, Niger, the traffickers sold him and his wife to a Nigerian who took them to Sabha, Libya, where they were separated in different cells.

    We were made to contact our families on the phone and I had to ensure the payment of N400, 000 for my release and N300, 000 for my wife,” Anyaegbunam said.

    Like others, he could only identify the Nigerians trading in their countrymen in Libya through the Nigerian languages they spoke and their accent.

    He said, “The Nigerians selling people in Libya are more wicked than many of the Arabs. I have never seen people so heartless as the Nigerians who bought and sold me.

    There are many of them in Agadez and Sabha, who are making so much money from selling their own people. But there are other West Africans doing the business too.

    When you approach them and say, ‘Please, my brother, help me.’ They would tell you, “No brother in the jungle.”

    A 25-year-old woman, Esosa Osas, who was in Libya for six months, said she also met many Nigerians selling their countrymen.

    You dare not talk to them, else they would beat you and lock you up. They sell women for 5,000 dinars and men for N4, 000 dinars. I noticed that the connection houses were also controlled by Nigerian women.”

    All these accounts were corroborated by 35-year-old Harrison Okotie who lived in Libya for three years until his repatriation.

    Nigerians and Libyans are doing the business like they are one big happy family,” he said.

    Most of the migrants who arrived Nigeria on Thursday were from Edo State.

    Officials of the state’s task force on illegal migration were on hand with luxurious buses to transport their people back home.

    A member of the task force, Mr. Okoduwa Solomon said that his team had made six such journeys to the airport within the last one month to take their indigenes repatriated from Libya back home.

    He said, “The first process is to take them through counselling, then we profile them.

    After that, we put them in a home that the state government has provided for the returnees. The Edo State Government is paying each of the returnees from the state a stipend.

    They are going to undergo a training in agriculture, poultry, fishery and others to make them useful to themselves and the system.”

    Officials of the National Emergency Management Agency coordinate the reception of the returnees at the airport.South West Zonal Coordinator of the agency, Mr. Yakubu Sulaiman, said the returnees would be lodged in a hotel where they would have the chance to clean up before their journey back home.

  • 1,295 Nigerians returned from Libya in November – NEMA

    1,295 Nigerians returned from Libya in November – NEMA

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) says a total of 1,295 Nigerians voluntarily returned from Libya in November after being stranded in the volatile North African country enroute Europe.

    The Nigerians returned in various batches between Nov. 6 and Nov. 30 with the assistance of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and the European Union (EU).

    The Director-General of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Alhaji Mustapha Maihajja, made the disclosure while receiving a fresh batch of 150 Nigerians who arrived the country on Thursday.

    The returnees were brought back aboard a Boeing 737-800 aircraft with Registration Number:6A-DMG.

    The aircraft landed in the Cargo Wing of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos at about 9.15pm.

    The returnees comprised of 13 female adults and one teenage girl while the male were 133 adults, two teenage boys and one baby boy.

     

    NAN

  • Nigerians gave us their mandate for free; we can’t afford to disappoint them – SGF, Boss Mustapha

    The newly appointed Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Boss Gida Mustapha, has said the mandates Nigerians freely gave to the incumbent administration must not be taken for granted.

    The SGF noted that Nigerians expected change which the incumbent administration vigorously campaigned for and it would be disappointing to give them (Nigerians) anything less.

    Mustapha, who was appointed on Monday as a replacement for Mr. Babachir Lawal, said these in an interview with State House correspondents after meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    In his words, “We went round and campaigned and sought for their (Nigerians’) mandate; freely they gave us and it behoves on us charged with responsibilities to ensure that we do not disappoint them.

    “The expectations are great out there. You live with families and you know the expectations of families. You live in communities, you know the expectations of those communities. You live in geographical jurisdictions and you know the expectations of those people.

    “But we have come at a time when the resources are very very lean, in some cases not available but I believe with prudent management as being put in place by Mr. President, we will be able to navigate this very difficult terrain and at the end of the day, every Nigerian will have a smile on his face.”

    Mustapha said although the present administration was not promising Nigerians heaven on earth, it could move them from “the current state of squalour in which they were, to a state where there would be hope and expectations.”

    He said if there was hope that things would be better, Nigerians as understanding people would continue to give the government the kind of support that was required to push the nation ahead.

    The new SGF said he would wait to take his oath of office before disclosing what Nigerians should expect from him.