With regard to current deportation of Nigerians in Kenya, I - TopicsExpress



          

With regard to current deportation of Nigerians in Kenya, I suggest that President Goodluck should excommunicate all transaction between Nigeria and Kenya and also commence the deportation of Kenyans in Nigeria. Nigerians are not slaves and we can never. Here are some ordeals encountered recently by Nigerians in Kenya: Tracking method “The moment you call a friend and the security agents noticed it is a Nigerian name you called, they would track both of you and get you arrested. They also intercept calls, and once they notice that you sounded Nigerian, they would trace you and get you arrested immediately.” Owoseni told Sunday Sun that while in Kenya, he was into importation of human hairs that he also supplied to Uganda and Tanzania, and he had just stocked his shop. Oseni alleged that the security agents broke his gate while he was away on the day they came to arrest him, at about 5pm, and waited for him. “They even arrested a friend that was in my company at that time. I will not mention his name because he is among those in detention in Kenya.” Kenyan wife works with Kenyan army Owoseni who arrived in Nigeria with nothing, told Sunday Sun that like many other Nigerians, he was married to a Kenyan and they had a child, Micheal. He stated that his Kenyan wife, Damaris, who works for the Kenyan army, was still at work when he was arrested, and they did not allow him to communicate with her before he was deported. Like the other deportees, he urged that the Nigerian government should not let all their struggles in Kenya to be in vain. Another Deportee speaks Also forced out of Kenya, was Oluwatosin Adebiyi, an indigene of Oyo State, who was arrested at midnight and taken away in his nightclothes. “They stormed my house at midnight and arrested me. They were about 40 armed men, and before I was taken away, they ransacked the house and took away all handy valuables including my $20,000 cash, five phones and three ipads belonging to me and my wife. My duplex, two cars and other valuables in the house are worth over N60 million. “The most annoying part was that they rendered me incommunicado, disallowed me from communicating with my Kenyan wife and children. They did not give me any option while in detention.” They jumped into my compound around 1 a.m. –Daniel Another deportee, Mr Daniel, narrated his ordeal in Kenya. “On Sunday night (June 2), about 15 policemen who were armed to the teeth, came to my house. They actually scaled the fence like criminals, around 1 a.m., and ordered me to open my door. Initially, I thought they were armed robbers. And many others.
Posted on: Tue, 18 Jun 2013 04:35:53 +0000

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