Nigeria has deported the 119 Togolese asylum seekers who
have been refugees their whole lives, the United Nations Refugee Agency
(UNRA) said yesterday.
The group of Togolese came to Nigeria in July after Benin Republic,
which had hosted them for nearly a decade, stripped them of refugee
status.
Nigerian soldiers
loaded them onto buses in Lagos on Saturday and drove them to Togo
through Benin Republic.
Brigitte Eno, deputy representative for the U.N. Refugee agency in
Nigeria, said the group should have been counselled before being
repatriated.
“They were supposed to be informed individually and counselled but
immigration did it their own way,” Eno said adding: “We were not even
aware of the fact they were being put on buses.”
General Manager of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency
Michael Akindele, said due process was followed, they were all
interviewed but their requests for asylum were rejected.
Many of the Togolese asylum seekers claim they face repression at home, having fled political violence after the 2005 election.
Some said they witnessed family members being arrested and killed by the military because of their support for the opposition.
Amnesty International reported in February that Togo sometimes
tortures detainees. Togo’s President Faure Gnassingbe was reelected in
April after succeeding his father in the 2005 elections marred by
violence and rigging to perpetuate a family dynasty that has ruled for
nearly 50 years.
The asylum seekers were spotted on Awolowo Road in Lagos in August,
close to the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants, and Internally
Displaced Person, NCFRMI, office.
The refugees were registered by NCFRMI officials.
But the Lagos State Government which provided them with temporary
shelter, urged the Federal Government to prevail on its agencies to
repatriate back to their country the illegal immigrants who took refuge
at the state’s Emergency Resettlement Centres (ERCs) in Igando,
Alimosho Local Government area and Agbowa, Ikorodu.
Secretary to the State Government Mr. Tunji Bello said the government
could no longer continue to accommodate the illegal immigrants due to
the enormous pressure put on the ERCs at Igando and Agbowa facilities.
Bello explained after the Togolese nationals were sighted at Awolowo
Road, Ikoyi “Immediately Governor Akinwunmi Ambode was informed of their
illegal presence, he promptly directed that the relevant state agency
should take up responsibility of accommodating them, initially at the
Emergency Relief Camp (ERC) in Igando and later at its camp in Agbowa,
Ikorodu,” he said.
Bello added: “As at today, the number of Togolese illegal immigrants
has increased from 114 to 199, putting serious pressure on the limited
spaces at the two camps.”
He pointed out that the Togolese immigrants were expelled from Benin Republic where they had lived for over 10 years.
“They came to Nigeria, Lagos to be precise, and because of the
accommodation provided by the state government at its ERCs, those
illegal immigrants at the Igando camp started calling others on
telephone in Benin Republic to come to Nigeria, telling them that they
now have a new home. As at the Weekend, another 85 illegal immigrants of
same Togolese descent were taken to ERC, Agbowa.
“The state has discovered that many of them smuggle their ways through the Nigeria borders,” he said.
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