The
House of Representatives has come out to condemn the ill-treatment and
discrimination against Nigerians living in South Africa, stressing that
over 409 convicts were currently serving jail terms there.
Mrs.
Abike Dabiri-Erewam, the Chairman of the House Committee on Diaspora,
disclosed this in a statement issued after the committee’s visit to two
prisons in South Africa. She described the increasing number of
Nigerians in foreign prisons as “ridiculously embarrassing.”
The
representative of Ikorodu Federal Constituency in Lagos State,
Dabiri-Erewa, who visited the prisons alongside two members of the
committee, Ajibola Famurewa and Umaru Shidanfi, consular officers of the
Nigerian Embassy and executives of the Nigerian Union in South Africa,
disclosed that over 400,000 Nigerians were currently living in South
Africa.
During
her interaction with some inmates, the lawmaker explained that some of
them confessed that they had been denied their freedom, despite
completing their jail terms.
“The inmates
complained of extreme discrimination by the prison authorities in South
Africa. The law enforcement officers always maltreat citizens of Nigeria
for unjustifiable reasons. Sometimes, the authorities tore into pieces
their Nigerian passports among several other allegations and refused to
grant them bail, while others from other countries that committed
similar bailable offence were granted bail.”
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