Irregular migration: NiDCOM boss advises against media blackmail on deportation

218

The Chairman/CEO of Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM), Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa has advised Nigerians who illegally travelled to the UAE and get stranded to desist from resorting to media blackmail.

Dabiri-Erewa gave the advice in a statement by Abdur-Rahman Balogun, Head of Media, Public Relations and Protocols of the commission on Thursday in Abuja.

She said that the stranded Nigerians who were in the UAE illegally, should not make an already bad case worsen by resorting to media blackmail.

Dabiri-Erewa said the commission was responding to a post on some social media blogs that “300 Nigerians abandoned in Dubai as NIDCOM, NAPTIP, Foreign Affairs relax evacuation effort”.

She said in spite of several warnings by the government, it was regrettable that some Nigerians still found themselves as victims of this act.

“In line with its citizens diplomacy, government has approved the evacuation of over 300 Nigerians stranded in the UAE,“she said.

She said that regrettably, many of those affected had not been totally cooperative as they refused to follow the laid down procedures.

“Investigations also revealed that over 100 Nigerians had served various jail sentences (ranging from drugs to credit card frauds, robberies amongst others),“he said.

Dabiri-Erewa said having landed at the holding centres , they demanded that the Nigerian consulate in Dubai to should immediately bring them back.

She said that rather than complying with the directives of the Nigerian consulate in Dubai, some of them engaged in media blackmail of the Nigerian and UAE government.

The NiDCOM boss said media blackmail would make an already bad case worse, saying that rules on such cases would not be circumvented.

She said that the alleged abandonment of Nigerians in Dubai was completely untrue and misleading.

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Nigerian Mission have been working assiduously with the UAE authorities to assist over 300 Nigerians stranded in the country for various reasons, she said.

She said the offences range from overstay, loss of passports, lack of documentation, especially in the case of infants to pending cases with the Emirati Police.

Dabiri-Erewa advised Nigerians affected to comply with the laid down rules and regulations as stipulated by the UAE and the Nigeria Consulate in Dubai. (NAN)