The United
States has deported 34 Nigerians who arrived at the Murtala Muhammed
International Airport (MMIA), Lagos Wednesday afternoon aboard a chartered Omni
Air International aircraft with Registration Number: W342AX.
The
deportees who claimed most of them were forced back to their motherland for
minor infractions comprised 32 males and two females who were sent back home on
various offences bothering on homicide, fraud, distributing prohibited items,
impersonation among other offences.
The spokesman of the Lagos Airport Police Command,
DSP Joseph Alabi, confirmed the development.
Alabi said: “At about 14.30 hours (2.30p.m.
Nigerian time), we received 34 Nigerians who were brought back from the United
States. They were made up of 32 males and two females. "
He said the 25 of deportees were alleged to have
committed criminal offences, one was allegedly involved in narcotics while the
others were alleged to have committed immigration-related offences.
Alabi said the deportees were received by officers
of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), the National Agency for the
Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and the Police.
Also on ground to receive them were officials the
Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) and the National Drug Law Enforcement
Agency (NDLEA).
Alabi said the deportees were profiled by the
relevant authorities and were allowed to depart to their various destinations.
The deportees claimed that the US government
wrongly deported them and explained that most of them were forced back to
Nigeria for minor offences, which should not have warranted deportation.
Though, most of the deportees were not willing to
talk to the media, but Mr. Charles Nwankwo, who claimed to be a doctorate
degree student in the US, insisted that his deportation was wrongly carried
out.
According to Nwankwo, the police arrested him in
his house for committing no offence and he had been challenging his impending
deportation in the court.
He lamented that the case was still ongoing in the
court before he was forcefully removed from the detention camp on Tuesday in
the US and airlifted to Nigeria.
Nwankwo therefore called on the Nigerian Government
to wade into illegal deportation of Nigerians especially since the President
Donald Trump’s administration.
He said: “I am a PhD student in the US and I was
yet to complete my course before I was forcefully repatriated. I didn’t commit
any offence in that country. I was surprised that I could be deported like a
criminal.”
Also, Mr. Olusegun Olatunji said he had been
residing in the US in the past 30 years.
According to Olatunji, he never committed any
infraction in the US besides importing herbs from China, which the government
claimed was counterfeit.
He lamented that he was fined $41,000 by the
government, which he paid and wondered why he should still be repatriated to
Nigeria after paying the sum.
He, however, said some of the deportees overstayed
in the US while others committed traffic offence, stressing that these were
minor offences, which should not have warranted their deportation.
The deportee said: “I would have spent 30 years in
the US by October 18. I have been in the US without any infraction. “The only
infraction I committed was that I ordered merchandise from China; herbs and
they claimed the herbs were counterfeit. That was my so called offence and I
was ordered to pay $41,000, which I paid to the government. They still
confiscated the merchandise after paying the sum, but despite this, they still
deported me. I have never committed any infraction in the US apart from
importing these herbs from China.
“Most of us here have cases in different courts in
the US, but the government did not allow us to see the resolution of the cases.
They just took us by force and deported us from the US. This is quite unfortunate.”
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