Just on the heels of the bothched rescue mission of British citizen and an Italian in hostage situation yesterday in Sokoto, the British Government has deported 120 Nigerians includng women and children to Lagos on a CARGO PLANE. Cargo Plane!!! Woah, Cargo!!!!!!!!! Disrespectful, unfair regardless of the situation that warranted the deportation... Do we have British citizens we can deport back to the UK? I bet we don't.. Well, just sayin.. I asked cos I remember just a couple of days ago the Nigerian government displayed a tit-for-tat reaction to South Africa's deportation of some Nigerians, the South African government has since apologized for this.. Do you think the British
government should apologize too? I won't count on it.. But they owe apologies for getting the 120Nigerians on a plane that's used for cargo. The haudacity! Sad stuff here.
Daily Trust's report..
The deportees arrived the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Ikeja in Lagos in the early hours of today.
The deportees were airlifted back home aboard a chartered cargo aircraft that landed at the cargo section of the international airport.
A reliable source told newsmen that the deportees were brought home in the early hours, so as not to draw undue attention from the public.
The deportees, comprising mainly young men and women, narrated their unsavoury experiences, saying that they were brought back home unprepared by the British authorities.
Many of them were said to have kept themselves busy, making telephone calls to their friends and relations on how to pick them at the airport.
The source said that the deportees also made frantic efforts to move their luggage which were packed in `Ghana Must Go’ bags from the cargo wing of the airport to the airport's main gate, preparatory to finding their ways out of the airport.
Some of the deportees were said to have expressed reservations over the way and manner they were brought home in a cargo aircraft.
Scores of airport workers stopped by to interact with the deportees, as some of them narrated their ugly experiences and not knowing what exactly to fall back on, now that they had returned to a country they left many years ago.
One of the deportees, a young lady, who declined to give her name said: "I am not interested in discussing why we were brought back home but my problem now is how to get out of this airport without drawing unusual attention.
"I must, however, add that it is not a pleasant experience,’’ she added.
Another deportee, a young man, lamented that they were sent home unprepared and wondered how he would be able to cope. (NAN)
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