Forty-one
Nigerians deported from seven European countries for committing
immigration-related offences arrived the
Murtala Muhammed International Airport
in Lagos on Thursday.
This is just
as a batch of 128 Nigerians deported from Libya arrived at the same airport
aboard a chartered Airbus A320 Afriqiyah aircraft with registration number
5A-ONA.
The seven
European countries that deported are Australia, Switzerland, Hungary, Netherland,
Germany, Norway and Denmark.
The
Privilege Style aircraft with Registration mark EC-120 which flew in the
deportees, comprising 35 male and six female, touched down at 10:50am.
“This
morning, we received 41 Nigerians who were brought back from Europe. They were
made up of 35 males and six females,” Joseph Alabi, spokesman of the Lagos
airport police command, told NAN.
He said all
the deportees were alleged to have committed immigration-related offences in
their host countries.
Thirty-four
Nigerians were deported from six European countries on June 22 for committing
similar offences.
The
Nigerians were deported from Switzerland, Germany, Iceland, Austria, Belgium
and Hungary.
Meanwhile,
the aircraft which conveyed those from Libya touched down the Lagos airport at
5:35pm.
The
deportees, comprising 126 male, two female, were flown back into the waiting
hands of officers of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), the National
Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and the Police.
Also on
ground were officials of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and
the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN).
The two
females and four male deportees had medical cases.
Mustapha
Maihaja, director-general, NEMA, represented by Suleiman Yakubu, zonal
coordinator, south-west, NEMA, used to occasion to counsel Nigerians not to be
deceived by phantom promises in their quest for pastures.
He said one
of those who returned had sustained bullet injuries all over his body had been
stretchered into a NEMA ambulance.
Maihaja said
the victim would be taken to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) for
proper medical attention.
He advised
Nigerians to stay back and contribute their quota to the socio-economic
development of the country.
“There are a
lot of things you can do in Nigeria here. You don’t have to travel outside the
country in search of greener pastures,” he said.
“My advice
to parents is to keep tab on their children and to ensure that they know where
their children are going and not to be deceived by phantom promises.”
Maihaja said
NEMA and some state governments had put various schemes in place to help
rehabilitate and reintegrate returnees into the society.
On
Wednesday, Julie Okah-Donli, director-general, National Agency for Prohibition
of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP, said 540 Nigerians were set for deportation
from Libya, beginning from August 10.
She had said
the deportees would be brought back to Nigeria in three batches.
Thousands of
Nigerians have been flown back from Libya, with some voluntarily returning with
the help of the International Organisation for Migration.
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