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Tuesday, August 06, 2013
Lagos Deportations and Crisis of Citizenship--Okey Ndibe
Okey Ndibe
he debate over Lagos State’s deportation of some Igbo elements to Anambra State has done two things at once. One, it has underlined the shakiness of the idea of one Nigeria. Then, two, in focusing too narrowly on an ethnic explanation, the debate has obfuscated what is a much broader, and fundamental, issue.
Initial reports suggested that 70 or more Igbo were herded in one bus or several, driven across the Niger Bridge, and dumped in Onitsha. Late last week, Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos stated that only 14 persons were removed. He also echoed other defenders of the policy by disclosing that the “deportees” were vagrants, some of them with varying degrees of mental problems.
The governor’s was not an excellent argument. For one thing, poverty does not – should not – vitiate citizenship. Nigerians who are psychiatric cases are still deserving of the same basic rights and privileges of citizenship, unless they pose a threat to others. If Nigeria translates as a nation, then its citizens, including indigent – even homeless – ones ought to be free to reside wherever they choose within the 36 states and the federal capital territory.
A policy that forcibly removes “undesirable” citizens from their state of residency to their state of origin does grave violence to the concept of national unity, to say nothing of the grave violation of the affected citizens’ right of movement. In that light, one is appalled by the deportations. And it doesn’t matter if only one person was shucked off, as opposed to, say, 100.
Having made that point of principle, it is meet to offer a corrective to the ethnic reading of the Lagos policy. It has since emerged that Lagos State had sent other ostensible undesirables “home,” to a number of northern as well as southwest states. If the “deportation” policy is at odds with the idea of one Nigeria – and I suggest it is – then Lagos State would be an equal-opportunity abuser of the rights of Nigerians, not just those from Anambra or Igboland.
If the particular removal of Igbo has generated the kind of heat not witnessed in the past, it is, in part, because Igbo – by their pattern of dispersal within Nigeria – most deeply embody the national spirit. Besides, they have shed more blood than any other ethnic group in the name of maintaining the unrealized, farfetched dream of a Nigerian nation. Therefore, any time it appears that the Igbo are being handed a red card in any part of Nigeria, the act of rejection reverberates, reminding us all that we occupy a space that falsely accuses itself of being a coherent, cohesive community.
It all brings me round to a point that begs to be made with regard to Lagos State’s shocking policy. That point is this: that we are shouting ourselves hoarse at an action that is a mere symptom, even as we fail to address the core of the problem.
That problem is an identity crisis, the emptiness of Nigeria as a nation – and, especially, with regard to the question of what it means to call oneself a Nigerian citizen. We have spent more than fifty years at the game of pretending to belong within the same nation. In fact, our ethnic identities remain dominant. Our ethnic ties easily trump any consideration of a national identity. It’s not as if ethnicity, as a rule, is incompatible with national cohesion. But Nigerians – at any rate, too many – have made an idol out of their ethnicity. For too many Nigerians, ethnicity is not merely a virtue, it is the sole virtue. It is a case of – to adapt a popular idea in political ideology – “My ethnic group, right or wrong.”
There are Igbo, Hausa, Yoruba, Efik, Ijaw, and so on who vehemently abhor embezzlement of public funds – unless the embezzler happens to part of their (ethnic) number, in which case graft becomes absolutely excusable, if not heroic. Besides, to read comments on any website frequented by Nigerians is to witness the savage verbal bricks that Nigerians – many of them holders of advanced degrees – hurl at each other across ethnic lines. Name any unprintable name, and you’d find that Nigerians use it against their fellows from other ethnic groups in daily verbal warfare. I fear that, should the occasion arise in Nigeria – God forbid! – many Nigerians would be quite ready to butcher members of the ethnic “other” with a genocidal glee that surpasses the horrors the world witnessed in Rwanda.
Again, it’s all proof of a country whose fault lines are numerous and turning into a maze of chasms, a deeply riven, fragmented patchwork of a nation. In today’s Nigeria, an Igbo who is born in Sokoto and lives all her life there would still be expected – indeed, required – to enter her father’s Igbo state as her “state of origin.” The same rules would apply to a Fulani man born in Onitsha. Nigerians must face up to their failure to found a nation within their shared space.
If the foregoing leaves an impression of ethnic solidarity, that impression is – on closer examination – a mirage. One or two Igbo governors have ventured outside their states to hire one or two aides. But you need only juxtapose that kind of tokenism against Abia State’s mass purge of civil servants from the other Igbo states – and the portrait of intra-ethnic resentment is writ large.
There’s some irony in the fact that Governor Fashola has done far more than most Igbo governors in recruiting people from other states, including Igbo, to work in his government. But that does not justify his government’s policy of seizing Nigerians in Lagos and deporting them to their states of origin.
To insist on the point does not mean that one dismisses the profound challenge of running a state whose dramatically exploding population is a strain on resources. If Nigeria is to be achieved as a nation, then the likes of Fasholas ought to respect the right of Nigerians to reside wherever they wish. Even so, some of Mr. Fashola’s critics must also decide whether they wish to commit themselves to build Nigeria into the semblance of a real community – or merely postpone the day when we would all need visas to visit each other’s ethnic enclave.
culled from saharareporters
*whats your take on this issue and with what Mr Ndibe has written?
42 comments:
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This Okey Ndibe no waste school fees unlike that trying-to-remain-important FFK. I didn't finish okey's piece, but it seemed unbiased enough. If I want to give my take, its going to be longer than this because I like speaking as an empiricist.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteU sound more like a sociologist :)
DeleteIbo people and their inferiority complex
DeleteI u.stand Mr Ndibe point thou the story is too long.Gov Fashola must have a reason for doing this and I think it's becus Lagos is highly congested,you will be amazed how many people are just roaming lagos,no where to sleep.They Just heard of Lagos and they jump any bus and come.There by becoming a menace in Lagos.Gov Fashola has always made himself clear that Lagos is not for everybody.
ReplyDeleteWhat fashola did can be described as doing the 'right thing the wrong way'! How about rehabilitating them or a dialogue wt the govt of their state of origin to transfer them. I hope fashola also transferred the hausa destitutes abi him dey fear BH?
DeleteIf they aren't rehabilitated, what's the guarantee that the won't return to lagos?
DeleteGod bless you... @the first person to reply. I'm a pure breed Lagosian, but Fashola went about this the wrong way. Our unity is already being questioned, and he goes ahead to do sth like that. If not that most Nigerians are cowards, a war could have ensued as a result of that. It is unfair to the people and Nigeria as a whole.
DeleteWatch wot comes out of your mouth,coz d ones here in d north can also be deported abi no be wot ur sayn d oda way round too @anon 8:42
DeleteI tot fashola was educated,smh,such a shame,wat happened to rehabilitation?I wonder,if they want the igbos to return,he should just state it,wat is wit igbo's?if not their place of market,it is deporting them,such a shame for a man that started so well.
DeleteIf something like this happens and raises distasteful issues pertaining to One Nigeria, why should the Government be silent for too long about it? And when the government finally breaks its silence, it does little to convince the general public of its reasons for these actions. I'm really disappointed in governor Fashola (who is presently the best Nigerian Governor to me) for this prolonged silence. The tribal and religious tensions in Nigeria are glaringly obvious in every generation, and he knows this. He has to make a public statement on this issue quickly because it is now too sensitive and it's thinning the line of brotherhood among us. And I would love Nigerians to stop using the word "deportation". Whether it's Onitsha, Bussa, Warri, Lagos, Maiduguri; this is NIGERIA.
ReplyDeleteAbeg let who has no house go to his village. At least there would be a rent free mud house, a mat to sleep on and fresh ugwu from the farms. As long as Nigeria has no social welfare in place, it becomes pertinent for people's relatives to take care of their own. Shikena.
ReplyDeleteShame on you!
DeleteIt has since emerged that Lagos State had sent other ostensible undesirables “home” to a number of northern as well as southwest states....Did the Press carry this report? If they did, when? If they didn't why? I don't remember reading it.
ReplyDeleteWhy is it that it's when Fashola deported the Igbos that it made headlines? Some government policies aren't always popular and BRF must have very good reasons. I agree with the #2 comment.
Nigeria isn't advanced enough to posit that wherever you are born, you should "adopt" it as your state of origin. (My boss was born in NY and says she's a New Yorker despite her parents being from Boston.)
@memphis. Fashola has addressed the issue. Its on youtube. SDK, can you please post the video on Fasholas response to this allegations. Its on tv360nigeria channel on youtube. The man deserves a fair hearing from all the bs that is being said about him.
ReplyDeleteyou igbos please get over yourselves.....we don't need miscreants on our streets causing a nuisance for we peaceful and law abiding residents of Lagos state....those who were deported were those who had no business being in town and clearly did not nee to be here..they have a home to return to and were helped to go back....when Hausa destitutes were sent back to the north some time back Ibos did not make noise...while we do not disagree that alot of ibos are hardworking some of them just have no business leaving their villages.....mind you it wasnt only ibos that were affected.....
ReplyDeletewhen fashola made an igboman a commissioner how many of you commended him? now he has sent destitutes and people who have no business being in lagos now you are all making noise.......when he sent the hausas back who made noise? pls get over yourselves.....
ReplyDeleteStella plz nxt tym sumarize i cant read erytin
ReplyDeleteMr Fanstuff so if you didn't read an article then in your warped mindset, it probably wasn't published. its people like you that I can't stand, you sit in far away new york acting all high and mighty and making comments about issues in Nigeria you are obviously ignorant about. Is it possible for Fashola's/Lagos State Govt's action to be repeated in civilised countries like the Uk or USA. Whether you think Nigeria is advanced or not, our country is guided by a constitution, Fashola is first and foremost a legal practitioner and should know what he did was unconstitutional. Bending the truth to defend his actions won't change the truth, Fashola was wrong in this case. I am not ibo and this is not about the ibos, its much bigger, its a very dangerous precedence that must be nipped in the bud. This is not about an unpopular policy, this is about illegality, and there are no good reasons for a Govt to perpetrate illegality. By the way keep your boss's business your business, we are not interested in it, you have obviously not learnt anything from it, or were you just trying to subtly tell us that your are in New York, judging by your sense of reasoning you are probably there cleaning toilets.
ReplyDeleteFanstuff, if the Northerners and westerners were "deported" from Lagos to their states and no news carried it, it's becos their elite refused to speak for the voiceless among them, but the easterners despite their attitude has decided to speak out for their common man and the voiceless among them. What fashola did is wrong from every point/angle of view. Insult urself if u want.
ReplyDeleteAde Adebanjo Esq your idiocy is startling! Serious beef. Please read my post again or if you are blind, you need surgery to restore your blindness. Where did I type that I live in New York? So, I can't work in Nigeria and have a boss as a New Yorker? Dumb!! Ekwuensu.
ReplyDeletePeople like you haven't seen the four walls of an airport and the moment you get a visa to Libya (that's the best you will get,) you will jump at it and run straight into a war zone to work as a gigolo to the indigenes. It's your inferiority complex that makes you end your posts with "esq." Who does that in 2013? Igbo wannabe.
fashola should not be blamed. He might be having his reasons.
ReplyDeleteokey ndibe is to igbo ethnic issues as fani kayode is to yoruba issues,both of them pretend to be objective intellectuals but are tribalists in disguise.just search for both their views during the achebe-awolowo one
ReplyDeletethe issue is very clear and direct,lagos state is a cosmopolitan melting pot which has the highest number of non indigenes living and working there.not only this lagos state has the highest number of people migrating there in search of money every single week, or even daily. so it is obvious that the resources are stretched as it is.
when fashola was shouting that lagos state should be given special status,none listened to him.i didn't see okay ndibe waxing his idiotic lyrics then
is he collecting more in allocations than Anambra and other states?
is lagos state being paid additional allocations to cater for the multitude who daily move there?
how many states have the huge number of people living under bridges and on the street like lagos state?
so okey ndibe expects fashola to leave vagrants to roam about and sleep under the bridge because they are from anambra,while the ones from other states or yoruba are picked up..
fashola has explained clearly that the states resources are stretched,and they had to make room for others to come in,apart from this most of the vagrants expressed an interest to go back home.when interviewed they stated they were from anambra.when lagos state got in touch with anambra liaison office in lagos to come and confirm and possibly transport these people they refused to show up
while the horrible pogrom cannot be denied in history,and what the igbos went through was horrific by any standards,i think playing the victim card every single time is getting tiring and irritating.the jews they keep referring to as their family did not sit down in one place whining about nazi germany every time.
if he is talking about igbo identity in the Nigeria then he should face the igbo political leaders first before the rest of us..the ibo political leadership are the ones selling their people out..already they have started campaigning for jonathan 2015 while some are saying igbo presidency..
when uzoma okere an ibo was assaulted by the naval officer fashola was the first person that condemned and took action even before ibo leaders.
when ngozi nwosu needed money for operation how many of them cme forward with the money?
when they held the achebe colloquium in the states fashola went there even though yoruba leaders were venting over achebe's portrayal of awolowo..
the pertinent question to ask are
why did peter obi not call fashola personally to express his grievance and ask for an explanation? rather going straight to the press?
why did his own officials not respond to the lagos state request but ignored it?
has peter obi deported free and full blooded Nigerians to akwa ibom or not?
Amaechi just announced that he will be repatriating 113 people back to their state of origin,no one has said anything yet meaning its an agenda
@ mr adebanjo esq
ReplyDeletein what way were his actions unconstitutional? pls dont come on here and try and befuddle anyone.if you are a legal practitioner show us where the constitution states that vagrants and those which health challenges living on the streets should not be taken back to their states of origin?
what the constitution states is that every nigerian has freedom of movement and association to go and associate and hold paid employment,business in any part of nigeria. fashola has not asked healthy,sane,employed anambrarians to leave lagos they are still doing their business freely...
you mention in civilised countries,i suggest you have never visited any of them or you have but dont pay attention to their laws.
go and interview the foreigners being deported daily by the uk and the usa if permission is sought from Nigeria before deporting them.
go and google the case of the ghananian woman suffering the last stages of cancer that the ukba deported from her hospital bed.her case got to the eu court of human rights but that did not prevent her deportation she died 2 weeks after.
go and google the nigerian man suffering kidney decease at an advanced stage,with his medical kit he was deported to nigeria.
these are extreme cases,the normal deportation cases of foreign nationals doesn't take more than some months and this is a country with the highest observance of fundamental rights
america is even worse because they dont have time for all the whole europian court ish. so i would like you to mention which civilised country you are on about? unless its china and co which i have never been to, but usa and uk you can never tell me anything about the law
Luca, sometimes I think u are so much in a hurry to contribute or reply a post, u muddle up half way! Never compare INTER country deportation with INTRA country situation. These homeless guys do not need a visa to live anywhere in Nigeria, so what's they guarantee they won't come back to lagos. What yardstick was used to determine their 'crime' as being homeless. I strongly maintain that BRF ought to hv contacted the right agencies in their state of birth to handle the transfer/rehabilitation
Delete@ Luca, can a citizen become a foreigner in his own country? Until you answer this question all you have written is balderdash. Try and make sense to humanity so you won't incur the wrath of God. It's an advice. You may ignore.
ReplyDelete@anon 24
ReplyDeletetrust me,i stand by every single word i have written and i did not muddle anything up.
the reason i brought up the intra country deportation was as a reply to @adebanjo's comment where he mentioned civilised countries which i presume he was referring to the western world.
you are right,like i stated the constitution guarantees the right of every citizen to move freely anywhere in the country however this is a different case.
1. they have not committed a crime and the lagos state govt did not put them in prison they were in the rehabilitation centre which fashola has challenged anybody to go check out..these people need long term medical support,they need long term feeding shelter and all round psychological care .
2.when they were interviewed a lot of them expressed their desire to go back home and when interviewed they said they were from anambra state.
the anambra state govt were written,and they not only received the letter but responded to it TWICE until they ignored further correspondence.
the question is why did they ignore the lagos state govt's letters to come identify and make arrangements for these people?
lastly dont forget we are not running a parliamentary system of government where the money is shared between the main govt and the various councils like the UK.we run a presidential govt where majority of the money is in abuja and the rest are shared to the states.
lagos state and anambra get the same allocation yet lagos state spends more due to the nature of the state
Thanks for the pointers, well noted. Though ill still say u didn't particularly clear the air on the comparism btw deporting someone from say USA to Nigeria and from Lagos to Anambra(deportation isn't the right word for the former). Lagos govt didn't exhaust all avenues in dealing with such sensitive situation. Forget what they said during interview, it cld be induced. Then, even if u deny it, ur other reply below smacks of tribalism. Keep romance out of a serious talk pls
Delete@anon 26
ReplyDeletea citizen cannot become a foreigner in their own country i totally agree…the ibos in festac,apapa and several areas of lagos has anybody chased them away?
when their trading area in apapa got burnt did this same fashola rebuild it or not with govt money?
did this same fashola name a lagos state govt project after emeka anyaoku an ibo man or not?
did this same fashola have and retained 2 ibo men in his cabinet holding sensitive and juicy portfolios?
pls remind me how many yorubas or hausas are in peter obi's cabinet?
bro,dont let these people deceive you they are playing politics this same peter obi one of his daughters is dating a proper hausa guy that i know yet they will come outside and be acting as if they will die for their people
@luca.
DeleteWeldone. Weldone I say!
You have put ur points so eloquently across. You make sense die.
My only grouse: pls start ur sentences with capital letters I beg u:)
Thanks for the enlightening discourse. I am better educated.
Pls are Ibos the miscreants in Lagos? What of the touts and motor park boys and the beggars.Those are the true miscreants that sleep under the bridge. The ibos are in d markets joor making money. Ibos do not beg. And how come it wad not published when northerners were sent home.
ReplyDelete@Lucrabracee hehehe I dey laugh...just a few points.
ReplyDelete1) I live both in the UK and Nigeria(in the UK right now)
2) the Nigerian constitution does not discriminate or classify its citizens. All citizens have equal rights under the constitution (so regardless of health or financial status, they enjoy the same rights)
3) Now to the civilised countries you mentioned and the examples you gave, awwwwh you had to twist the truth to try and attract sympathy to your cause. All those people you mentioned who got deported are not UK citizens, and were in the UK illegally, that's is why they got deported regardless of their health status, as its not the duty of the United Kingdom's Government to tend to people who are in the country illegally. There are too many illegal immigrants who sponge off the welfare system here, enjoying benefits they are not entitled to, it doesn't matter how long you've lived in the UK, if you are here illegally and you get caught, you will be deported cancer or no cancer. The issue of illegal immigrants is a very topical issue right now in the UK, and there is no sympathy whatsoever for anybody residing illegally in the UK, but citizens of the United Kingdom can reside anywhere in the country they choose to live, regardless of their health, mental or financial status. So before you challenge me next time get your facts right, I bet when you spent hours writing your essay to me you thought you had nailed me, hehehe.
hehehe I actually replied you from the UK, and now that you've explained that you don't actually live in New York, it explains your moronic comparison between your boss's situation in America and Fashola's act of illegality in Nigeria.
ReplyDelete@ade adebanjo
ReplyDeletelet me ask you can someone from say imo state apply for or receive state bursary from lagos state?
can someone from lagos state apply for a state govt scholarship in anambra state?
this means even though the constitution says so,there are some exceptions…these are just a few because there are still more distinctions between states.
you say nigerian constitution does not discriminate,does the same constitution say anything about Nigerians in need of special support?
are homeless vagrants in need of psychological help the same as normal sane Nigerians living in lagos who work and pay their tax?if your answer is yes then that means they are eligible to run for any office in Nigeria including that of the president.
you have allowed the fact to be lost on you that more non indigenes from all over Nigeria live in Lagos than any other state, hence will require more money from Fed Govt before it can perpetually cater for every Nig irrespective.
what you are saying is that Lagos state should divert funds for tax payers in managing the health of these people for years if necessary at the expense of lagos residents,if fashola fails to repair roads or any other facility they will be the first to complain he has stolen the money
since you live in the uk,you will be familiar how the borough works (the equivalent of Nig local Govts) can someone from tower hamlet borough apply for a grant,benefit of any kind in chelsea borough?
Luca, u are still making wrong assertions during comparisons. My niece is a beneficiary of Rivers State bursary, a non indigene but have resided in R/state for years. I don't insist lagos shld do same though I think Lagos has a similar thing. Nobody is also saying lagos shld cater perpetually for non indigenous miscreants......No, but she didn't exhaust all her options in handling such delicate issue. Although I know u r trying to drive a point to adebayo, could we stop unnecessary allusion to two very different state policies i.e UK and Nig. Nigeria is deeply traditional despite all. I'm not sure how its done, but I doubt if a naturalised and crime free citizen in the UK would be deported for being homeless.
ReplyDeleteAde Adebanjo, then you are the one who sweeps the bridge under Old Kent Road. I guess you are on break and you topped up your Lycamobile to get online. Who asked you where you replied from bloody low life? Keep away from tube and surface rail stations because the Home Office is on the prowl looking for illegal immigrants like you to deport. Act of illegality my foot. Your level of thinking is so low and below -0. I was replying Okey Ndibe, get it? Read his post again to see why I replied him. Ekwuensu. Wannabe Igbo. This is what the internet has caused. Hoodrats like you pummeling their fingers with people above them.
ReplyDelete@lucabracee haba nah I can tell that you are educated, but why do you keep letting yourself down with the quality of your arguments.
ReplyDelete1. State government programmes(e.g. scholarships) targeted to benefit its citizens are not in anyway a breach of the constitutional rights of other Nigerians residing within the state.
2.there are constitutional qualifications that must be attained by anyone interested in running for public office including the office of the President. Now because these qualifications are mentioned in the constitution, it can therefore not infringe on the constitutional rights of people who do not have the qualifications.
3. That Lagos State deserves a much higher percentage from the Federal allocation than its currently receiving, is a given. Any sane Nigerian will agree with you on that, but the only reason why it is not getting its due is that the same constitution we are talking about only recognises 20 Local Govts Areas in Lagos. That can only be resolved through a constitutional amendment. Lagos State Govt generates more money from internally generated revenue(IGR) than any other state in the Federation(close to #20bn monthly), no State in the Federation generates even 50% of that from IGR. More than 80% of the IGR is generated from taxes received from non-indigenes and companies/corporations owned by non-indigenes. Out of the 20 LGAs in Lagos, Indigenes only constitute the majority in 3 LGAs(Badagry, Ikorodu, & Epe), non indigenes constitute the majority in the remaining 17.
4. now lastly if you are originally from the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, but now reside in the Kensington & Chelsea borough (which is where you pay your council tax or registered for benefits), yes you will receive whatsoever is due to you from the Kensington & Chelsea Borough Council and not Tower Hamlets where you were originally from. phew I don try, this na PHD work you give me.
@fanstuff ....hehehe firstly you said I've not seen the four walls of an airport, then you said I'll only get a visa to Libya and work as a gigolo there, now your are saying I sweep the "bridge under old kent road", now I know we have the London underground, but I didn't know we had a bridge under Old Kent Road, you mean there's a bridge under Old Kent road, I must make that report officially to HM the Queen and the PM. hahaha see as you just fool yourself, olodo rabata, oju eja lo mo je
ReplyDeleteInferiority complex "esq" with the -0 IQ. Get a life. Look for a man to ram a dick up your ass. Keep replying and have the last word if you may. That's the stuff made of hood rats like you. Jealous goat. Wannabe Igbo. Bloody child of a whore. You are an anon in other posts then you turn up as fake ade wherever Tinubu is mentioned. What did he do to you? He raped you as his "agbero" houseboy? Ndo biko, forgive him. Broke ass nigger.
ReplyDeleteSince you claim you are in London, you can only be a bridge sweeper with a job sweeping under the bridge in Old Kent Road. Takes an olodo empty skull like you to know one. Bastard.
ReplyDelete@fanstuff you are right. Tinubu was my lover and he's not paid up.
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