The New Zealand Herald

Nigerian wins right to stay

Man who converted to Christiani­ty fears for his life in Nigeria

- Jeremy Wilkinson

ANigerian man who faced death threats in his hometown after converting from Islam to Christiani­ty has won the right to remain in New Zealand after the Government tried to kick him out.

The man’s father is a chief imam at a mosque in Nigeria and when it was revealed his son had converted to Christiani­ty and been baptised, members of the mosque attacked the nearby church and killed two people. The man fled before making his way to New Zealand in 2015.

After two unsuccessf­ul claims for refugee status and two related judicial review applicatio­ns, a third applicatio­n to the Immigratio­n and Protection Tribunal led to his being granted protected refugee status in 2021. It was decided that if he continued practising his religion in his hometown he faced a risk of serious harm or death.

The tribunal also found he was especially vulnerable to Covid-19 and could not be rehomed in the Nigerian city of Lagos because of the prevalence of the virus there.

Put simply, he could not live in his hometown because of his Christiani­ty and he could not live in Lagos because of the prevalence of Covid.

The Government appealed the tribunal’s decision, arguing the man could have been sent to any other city in Nigeria and avoided harm from his family and from the virus.

The High Court in Auckland this year denied that appeal, saying the tribunal had made the right call in letting the man stay in NZ.

The Crown argued that the tribunal didn’t even look at Nigerian cities other than Lagos.

“It did not go on to assess whether other parts of Nigeria might be safe for the respondent: It simply granted him refugee status,” the Crown said in submission­s to the court. “Eliminatin­g Lagos city as a viable internal protection alternativ­e did not justify the further conclusion that protection was unavailabl­e in Nigeria as a whole.”

The tribunal last year found that Lagos would have been safe for the man in a religious sense, but not in a health sense.

“The chance of somebody who knew his father walking along the street at the same time as him, including when he was ministerin­g in the street, or while he was volunteeri­ng, and recognisin­g him as being his father’s apostate Christian son is random, remote and well below the real chance threshold,” it said.

“What is certain, however, is that given his heightened vulnerabil­ity should he contract Covid-19 in Lagos at a time of systemic stress on the healthcare system, the consequenc­es for him could be dire, if not fatal.”

Despite the Crown arguing that other Nigerian cities would be a viable option for the man, Justice Mark Woolford said that at the time of the tribunal’s decision all of Nigeria was suffering badly from the pandemic.

“The Covid-19 pandemic does not respect internatio­nal or internal boundaries,” he said.

“Although rates of infection have varied between the various Nigerian states, all states have been affected.”

Justice Woolford said the tribunal had not erred when granting the man protected refugee status.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? At the time of the tribunal’s decision, Nigeria was suffering badly from the Covid19 pandemic, the judge said.
Photo / AP At the time of the tribunal’s decision, Nigeria was suffering badly from the Covid19 pandemic, the judge said.
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