2 Nigerian girls seek Pres. Jonathan's intervention from deportation from Canada
Got this email from Funmi Macaulay, a US-born Nigerian presently living
in Brooklyn, NYC, and the founder of Nigerians Unite Against Boko Haram
(NUABH). She wrote an article about the plight of Ihuoma and Victoria,
two young Nigerians living and studying in Canada who are on the verge
of
being deported back to Nigeria. The two girls have been holed up in a
church basement the last nine months and .
See Funmi's article below...
I am surprised that I have not read in any media, local or
international, about efforts by the Nigerian government to help two
Nigerian students who have been on deportation list in Canada for a
'crime' that makes mockery of the very ideals that western societies
proud themselves on - hard work. Victoria Ordu and Ihuoma Amadi, 20 and
21 respectively, having been holed up in the basement of a church in
Canada - not for document forgery. No, not for 419, internet scam or
fake marriage, but for attempting to work and earn decent stipends to
augment what they get from home.
The news media in canada has been awash with the reports since June 2012 when the two University of Regina students took refuge in a church hoping that the Canadian authorities will forgive them for working in Walmart
for two weeks. The issue here is that the student visa they carry
permits them to work on campus but not outside. The students have in
their various interviews
stated that they stopped the Walmart jobs immediately they became aware
of the restriction. But the Canada authorities have simply refused to
budge.
Maybe the situation has lingered the way it is because of the green
color of the passport they carry. I doubt that the Canadian authorities
would have held their grounds the way they've done for almost a year
now if these two students were Americans, Indians, Chinese or even South
Africans. As one born of Nigerian parents in the US, I have the
privilege of knowing how it feels traveling with the Nigerian passport
and that of the US.
It is instructive that while Walmart that employed the students have
gone without any rebuke from the government, these two young ladies have
remained imprisoned in a church basement for more than nine months now
without knowing what day light looks like. While immigration
authorities accepted that Walmart had made an honest mistake in their
hiring practices, the same leniency wasn’t granted to the students.
“Walmart was given the benefit of the doubt, while the students weren’t,” said Michelle stewart,
an associate professor in the University of Regina, who's been
campaigning for the release of the two Nigerians. “The most common
response to this type of infraction is a fine of $320,” said Stewart.
"This is Canada, but it feels like hell for us," Ihuoma said in an
interview with CBS Canada. "We feel forgotten here, nothing is happening
at all."
Friends and well-wishers of these two students have in the last nine months mounted pressure on
the Canadian government, but not much has been achieved. I have been
involved in the social media campaign to drum support for these innocent
young Nigerians, but much as the protests on and off line continues to
grow, the Canadian authorities have remained hard-heartened.
Canada holds strong trade relations with Nigeria and is hoping to
grow its economic presence in the country as a springboard to reach the
rest of Africa. Being Canada's largest trading partner in sub-Saharan
Africa should serve as an incentive in extracting the right government
action on diplomatic matters like this. This is the time for Nigeria to
flex some diplomatic and economic muscles.
I remember when the reclusive North Korean government arrested two US
journalists and sentenced them to 12 years imprisonment with hard
labour for illegally entering the country. President Obama sent former
president Clinton to the country and in 24 hours those two lady
journalists were released to join their families. Nigeria, by virtue of
its economic and strategic might, can achieve similar result when
efforts are made from the top. Don't think I'm naive.
I expect President Jonathan's government to act now. Please save
Victoria and Ihuoma from what their lawyer has described as 'honest
mistake'.
Funmi Macaulay wrote in from New York
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