The Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Ambassador Aminu Wali, on Friday, protested the continued ‘discrimination and
profiling’ of Nigerians by some countries over the outbreak of the Ebola
disease in West Africa.
At an interactive session with
members of the diplomatic corps, Wali named 22 countries that had targeted and
discriminated against Nigerians since the index case of Ebola in Nigeria.
He said it was regrettable that
discrimination against Nigerians had persisted, in spite of the World Health
Organisation (WHO) declaration that Nigeria was Ebola-free.
He said it was regrettable that some
countries had chosen to flout WHO rules and protocols on preventing the spread
of the virus through deliberate policies of stigmatisation and discrimination.
According to him, the foreign
ministry has received unpleasant reports that Nigerians have been targeted and
discriminated in Bahrain, Cote d’Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon.
Other countries discriminating
against Nigerians are Cuba, Gabon, China, Egypt, Hong Kong, Kuwait, Qatar, Sri
Lanka, Turkey and Zambia.
Also in the list are Mauritania, Sao
Tome and Principe, South Africa, United Arab Emirates, Ukraine, Namibia,
Seychelles and South Sudan.
The minister expressed dismay that
even top government officials on working visits abroad had suffered
discriminatory practices by the countries.
He noted that it was “intriguing”
that it took time for the international community to acknowledge the valiant
and effective measures taken by Nigeria to contain the spread of the deadly
virus.
“It is, therefore, my hope that this
briefing will assist in expunging any negative notion about the Ebola virus in
Nigeria,” he said.
Wali called on the international
community to increase assistance to the countries afflicted with the deadly
virus.
He pledged that Nigeria would
continue to assist neighbouring countries and share its experience on the
successful control of the virus with the rest of the world.
A Nigerian, Mr Suleiman Mohammed,
who is the Honorary Consul to Mongolia, recounted how he was detained for six
hours in Seoul, South Korea, after alighting from his flight.
He said he was detained for several
hours by the immigration authorities in South Korea alongside Nigeria’s
ambassador to South Korea, Ambassador. Desmond Akawor.
Mohammed said the incident happened
on September 9.
He added that he was subjected to
the same treatment when he was transiting through South Korea even after he had
shown no symptoms of the virus.
In his remarks, the High
Commissioner of Trinidad and Tobago partly blamed the discrimination against
travellers from West Africa on the international media and ignorance.
“From Trinidad and Tobago and the
Caribbean, there is mass hysteria and ignorance on this issue (Ebola).
“The international media is
constantly reporting that there is Ebola in West Africa and some people think
West Africa is a country and not a region and in the Caribbean, that
understanding is not clear,” he said.
He cited an incident where union
workers at a port in Trinidad and Tobago refused to board an oil-tanker that
berthed in his country from Gabon.
According to him, there was hysteria
that the vessel that arrived from West Africa may have been exposed to Ebola.
Meanwhile, NAN learnt that South
Sudan had refused entry to Nigerian Foreign Service officers deployed to the
country because of Ebola.
In his contribution, the South Sudan
Ambassador to Nigeria, Parmena Mangar Riak, claimed that after the WHO
certification on October 20, some Nigerians received their visas to travel to
the country last week.
Dean of the Diplomatic Corps and
Cameroon Ambassador to Nigeria, Salaheddine Abbas-Ibrahima, claimed that many
countries had lifted restrictions on travel from people from Nigeria after the
WHO certification.
He assured the minister that “in a
matter of days,” there would be total lifting of the ban on restrictions of
travel by Nigerians by the remaining countries.
The ambassador, who did not name the
countries that had relaxed the ban, said that Cameroon would take advantage of
the Ebola information centre established by the Federal Government.
He said the centre would serve as a
source of information for countries to plan their national response to the
deadly virus.
Ebola: FG condemns 22 countries for discriminating against Nigeria
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Saturday, November 01, 2014
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