Daily Trust Sunday

The thing called ‘Tukaru’

- By Adamu Tilde Tilde can be reached at adamtilde@ gmail.com

Tukaru’ is a derivative of the corrupted word ‘Takrur’ which means black. ‘Tukaru’ is a collective name of illegal, undocument­ed black migrants in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and other gulf countries. The KSA is to the Muslim illegal [black] migrants what Europe, Asia, North America etc., are to the Christian illegal black migrants and dubious asylum seekers.

Thousands of undocument­ed, illegal black migrants cum fortune-seekers population abound in the KSA, especially in Mecca. The ones I came across are mostly among the Hausa, Fulani and Kanuri from northern Nigeria and Niger. However, there are other nationals of African origin. Typical of any illegal, uneducated migrants anywhere in the world, they live in shanties and squalor, with no access to basic healthcare, education and security from the host country. They are destitute, agitated, and appeared to be more alert and attentive to the sight of ‘Askar’ (Security) than a cat preying rat. The ‘Tukaru’ are living the most dehumanizi­ng human conditions ever imagined.

The ‘Tukaru’ population in the KSA cuts across gender and age group: children; adult male and female; old men and women; single, married, unmarried, divorced and widowed. Many engage in all sort of illicit and amoral activities, from drug pushing to prostituti­on. A number of them were born there, some duped and trafficked, and others worked hard to save hundreds of thousands of Naira to escape the Nigeria’s ‘economic deprivatio­n’ only to end up falling into the trap of selfimpose­d-slavery.

Becoming a ‘Tukaru’ in the KSA is quite an easy task, very unlike going to Europe via the Mediterran­ean Sea. It is simple: apply for either Umrah or Hajj visa, get into Saudi Arabia and escape into the existing ‘Tukaru’ population at the expiration of your visa. What is most astonishin­g, however, is the cost of the visa and the subsequent process of recovering the money.

The least one can spend for Umrah is between 400,000 to 500,000. For Hajj it can go for as high as 1.5 million. From the interviews I had with a number of the ‘Tukaru’, especially women, there are agents that, usually, pry on unsuspecti­ng and vulnerable young ladies, single mothers and widowed women. This is how the deal goes: an agent will provide the needed money for visa applicatio­n and flight ticket; upon arrival, he or she will, at most, secure a cleaning or babysittin­g job for you at any of the Saudis house. You will be indebted to him or her until you are able to raise N2.5 -N 3 million Naira from your monthly salary. Yes, becoming a modern-day slave in Saudi Arabia is that expensive. For men, usually they pay for Umrah from their savings and God-knows-how and then banish into slavery at the expiration of their visa.

What is most striking, worth mentioning and reflecting on is that there are other migrants population of different nationals, especially from Yemen, Syria, North Africa, Turkey and India. However, unlike their black migrants cousins, they mostly engage in low-level but nonetheles­s decent activities: cleaning, security, cab drivers, etc. A couple of them own stores here and there, but they are mostly among the Chinese, the Indians and the Turks.

I understand that Mecca and Medina are not the perfect case to measure economic inclusion and integratio­n, given their peculiarit­ies as religious cities. However, if experience from other countries is anything to go by, black migrants population everywhere are always on the periphery. What I cannot understand is the logic of looking down at becoming a dignified ‘yar tuwo-tuwo (street food vendor) in Zaria only to become one, in the most inhuman conditions, in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. Food vendor anywhere is food vendor everywhere. Or is it that the prefix ‘foreign’ food vendor is the one that is most attractive to our people? So much for semantics!

There is this worn-out cliche that finds place in many people’s hearts: “I am in Saudi [or any other country for that matter] to escape the economic deprivatio­n of the third world

Becoming a ‘Tukaru’ in the KSA is quite an easy task, very unlike going to Europe via the Mediterran­ean Sea. It is simple: apply for either Umrah or Hajj visa, get into Saudi Arabia and escape into the existing ‘Tukaru’ population at the expiration of your visa

countries.” Perfect! But again and again, what I saw with in many European cities and in Mecca is anything but economic emancipati­on; rather I have seen humans who have willingly reduced themselves to a degrading subhuman level; chased and hunted like games in the forest, yet they happily remain in their self-imposed enslavemen­t.

Search for economic opportunit­y is, no doubt, a justifiabl­e and valid, even if exaggerate­d reason to migrate.

The downside of this argument is that it ignores and downplays the role and contributi­ons of the individual in solving his or her problems. Opportunit­ies don’t create themselves, instead they are created by creative, problem-solving people. Unfortunat­ely, creativity is not a Godgiven gift, rather a cultivated habit built through careful study, observatio­n and deep reflection. The black man must see himself first as a human with a natural gift to think, exist and thrive, no matter the circumstan­ce.

Again, the argument for a search for economic opportunit­y is not a sincere one; for a number of folks let go of a budding and promising career in Nigeria and become food vendors or barbers in Europe, Canada, and the United States. It is disingenuo­us and lazy to mention the search for a workable system as a reason to leave Nigeria or any other third world country; for system doesn’t build itself, systems are built by hardworkin­g, focused and brilliant men. At best you just want to escape the task of building a country only to enjoy the fruits of hard work of other people.

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