The Federal Government of Nigeria is demanding an
explanation and immediate resolution following the deportation of almost
50 Nigerian students at the Ataturk Airport in Turkey.
Following a failed coup attempt in July, the Government of Turkey had only one organisation to blame; an rival and opposition, The Gulen Movement. This led to a crackdown in every sector from Education to the Military.
ALSO READ: More than 27,000 people have been dismissed from the Education sector because of the coup.
One
of the schools affected in the crackdown is Fathi University, one of
Turkey's best private universities set up by Fethullah Gulen, the
founder of the Gulen Movement.t is this school dozens of Nigerians students alongside students of
other countries were resuming into when they were held at the airport
for alleged affiliation with a terrorist organisation.
A relative of one of the students who spoke to ThisDay said:
“Upon
arrival at Ataturk International Airport in Istanbul, they were all
escorted to a room and their passport confiscated by Turkish police.
When
they enquired why they were clamped in a dirty room, the police said
they are students of a terrorist organisation. They offered to transfer
them to government schools but on the condition that we will pay same
fees as private universities.”
And what was the first response when the Office of the Minister of Foreign Affairs first contacted?
“I
am hearing the news of the deportation for the first time from you, but
I will follow up to get the facts and we are summoning him (Turkish
ambassador) again to demand an explanation (for the deportation.)"
The Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr Sola Enikanolaiye, said:
“We
summoned the Turkish ambassador to the ministry on Friday and demanded
the immediate release of the students. We also rejected the condition
imposed on the students that they should return to Nigeria and obtain a
fresh visa in line with their admission to a new university. We insisted
that they must be issued the new visa in Turkey there.”
It will be recalled that just after the coup, the Turkish Government had requested that 17 Turkish schools be closed down for their ties to the Gulen Movement, a request which the Nigerian Government didn't accept.
Could
this in anyway lead to strained ties between both nations? It's kind of
hard to tell, but in the end, it is hoped that free flow of people,
ideas, and capital will trump politics here.


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