The Sunday Guardian

Nigeria flays Beijing for ill-treating its citizens in China

- ABHINANDAN MISHRA NEW DELHI

Africa’s largest country and biggest economy, Nigeria, has become the first country in the region to speak out against China for the “maltreatme­nt, discrimina­tion, illegal detentions, forceful evictions and xenophobic attacks” that its people faced in China during Covid-19.

Responding strongly to the ill-treatment meted out to its citizens, the African country has now asked its law ministry to help its citizens file cases in the internatio­nal court against the ill-treatment they faced in China. Going a step further, Nigeria has also cracked down on thousands of Chinese immigrants who were legally or illegally staying in the country and is sending them back to China.

The Nigeria House of representa­tives, on 28 April, passed a motion (a copy of which is with The Sunday Guardian) titled: “Maltreatme­nt and Institutio­nal Acts of Racial Discrimina­tion against Nigerians Living in China by the Government of China” that was sponsored by 10 lawmakers of the country.

“Concerned that under the pretext of curbing the spread of Covid-l9, which ironically originated in Wuhan, China, several kinds of maltreatme­nt of Nigerian citizens in Guangzhou have been perpetrate­d by Chinese people and authoritie­s, including wrongful confiscati­on of Nigerian internatio­nal passports, prolonged and illegal detention of Nigerians in the name of mandatory quarantine, despite their having certificat­es of clean health and no recent travel history, outright refusal to release the test results, and the eviction of Nigerians from their homes and hotel accommodat­ions, etc,” the motion reads.

“Worried that in the exercise of his function of protecting the interests of nationals of a Sending State as provided for under Article 5 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, 1963, the Nigerian Consul General was treated in clear violation of Article 40 of the said treaty which requires the Receiving State to treat consular officers with due respect and to take all appropriat­e steps to prevent attacks on their persons, freedom or dignity,” the lawmakers mentioned in their motion.

The lawmakers have also mentioned the “troubling” case of Felix Awah Elijah, a Nigerian citizen and legal resident in China who mysterious­ly disappeare­d after his abduction and prolonged illegal detention by Chinese

Police authoritie­s sometime around 6 February 2019.

According to the motion, all letters and appeals from lawmaker Benjamin Okezie Kalu on the issue were ignored by the Chinese authoritie­s.

The lawmakers further said that the Chinese authoritie­s do not reciprocat­e the favourable treatment their nationals enjoy in Nigeria, but have instead endangered Nigerian businesses in China valued at billions of dollars.

“Also, worried that the actions and inactions of the Chinese authoritie­s clearly establish a trend of racial discrimina­tion as defined in Article 1(1) of the Internatio­nal Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Racial Discrimina­tion to mean “any distinctio­n, exclusion, restrictio­n or preference based on race, colour, descent, or national or ethnic origin,” the motion reads.

As per official figures, around 10,000 Nigerians, including investors, traders, workers and students, currently reside in and around Guangzhou in the Guangdong Province of the Peoples Republic of China. “These Nigerians have generated massive trade volumes between the two countries such that for 2019 alone, the Nigeriachi­na trade value was worth over $8.6 billion,” the motion stated.

Following the maltreatme­nt of Nigerians in China and in a visible show of spine, the lawmakers also ordered an investigat­ion into the legality of Chinese nationals living in the country currently seeking to repatriate them back to China.

The House mandated its committees on Interior, Nigeria Content Developmen­t and Monitoring, and Commerce to investigat­e the Nigerian

Immigratio­n, Corporate Affairs Commission, Nigerian Content and Developmen­t Monitoring Board, and any other relevant Ministry, Department or Agency to check the validity of all immigratio­n documents of Chinese immigrants in the country.

The committees have ordered the agencies to check the expatriate quota of all the Chinese businesses in Nigeria to ascertain the number of illegal and undocument­ed Chinese immigrants in Nigeria and to repatriate them to China to regularise.

The lawmakers have also asked the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and all relevant Ministries, Department­s and Agencies to provide all necessary financial and other assistance to affected Nigerian citizens in China who wish to seek redress in any local or internatio­nal court for breach of fundamenta­l rights, loss of property or any other actionable cause occasioned by their maltreatme­nt or discrimina­tion in China. Opportunit­y for India With the big brother of Africa, Nigeria showing strong signs of disenchant­ment with China, other neighborin­g countries, too, are likely to follow suit. This may come as a blessing for India.

As of today, India is the largest trading partner of Nigeria and Nigeria is India’s largest trading partner in Africa with the bilateral trade touching $13.89 billion in the 2018-19.

As per the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), Indian owned/operated companies are the second largest employer in Nigeria after the Federal Republic of Nigeria. More than 135 Indian companies are currently operating in Nigeria in diverse fields such as pharmaceut­icals, engineerin­g goods, electrical machinery and equipment, plastics, chemicals, etc. Some of the major companies include Bharti Airtel, Tata, Bajaj Auto, Birla Group, Kirloskar, Mahindra, Ashok Leyland, Skipper, Godrej, Simba Group, NIIT, Aptech, New India Assurance, Bhushan Steel, KEC, Dabur, etc.

Indian exports to Nigeria during the period 2018-19 were $3 billion, as against $ 2.25 billion in 2017-18, showing an annual growth of 33.27%. India’s imports during the period 2018-19 recorded $10.88 billion, as against $9.5 billion in 201718. Out of the total imports of $10.88 billion from Nigeria, crude oil alone accounted for $9.43 billion. India is the largest importer of Nigeria’s crude oil.

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