Seven Kenyan government officials and five airline crew have been detained in Nigeria for two weeks after they travelled to the country to deport Nigerian businessman Anthony Chinedu and two of his compatriots.
The
officials from different government departments including foreign affairs,
immigration and police, left Nairobi for Lagos in a chartered aeroplane on June
3 escorting the controversial businessman and two other Nigerians, Christopher
Nnanyelu and Oluwatosin Adebiyi. The three had been declared prohibited
immigrants in Kenya.
However,
in a dramatic turn of events, the officials have not been allowed to leave
Nigeria. They said authorities at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in
Lagos were holding them and their chartered East African Safari Express plane.
According
to them, Nigerian authorities have insisted the Kenyans will not be allowed to
fly out without the three men Kenya kicked out on drug trafficking claims.
Speaking
to the Daily Nation from Nigeria on Sunday, one of the officials, who requested
anonymity, said that attempts by the Kenyan embassy to secure their release had
been unsuccessful.
Escorted deportees
Those
stuck in Nigeria include Captain Tim Kavingo and his colleagues, flight
engineer Alaka Ochieng’ and flight attendants George Kamau and Ismail Adan.
First
officer Rokshanker Masoud, a Swede, is also affected.
The
government officials who escorted the deportees were Mr Barasa Okosa, Mr
Kariuki Ngugi, Mr Mungathia Muriira, Mr Pardala Dipason, Mr Kivuva Muthama, Mr
Andrew Kambi and Mr Mutinda Kakindu.
A
Nigerian journalist confirmed to the Nation that the aircraft was being held at
the airport’s cargo air wing. The airline’s office in Nairobi did not return
our calls on Sunday.
Sources
indicated that the government of Sweden had already contacted its embassy in
Nigeria to secure the release of the flight officer.
“We
are stranded here. The airport commander has instructed that we cannot return
to Nairobi without the deportees,” said the official who called the Nation from
his hotel room.
The
airport commander had blocked attempts by the East Africa Safari Express
management to fly its crew back to Nairobi on a Kenya Airways flight. On Sunday
evening, Foreign Affairs ministry’s Head of Communication Beatrice Kung’u
admitted that several Kenyans, who accompanied the Nigerians deported 10 days
ago, were still being held in Lagos.
But
she could not discuss the circumstances under which the Nigerian authorities
were detaining them.
“We
are addressing the issue,” she said, but added that only the Immigration
authorities could discuss the details.
Principal
Secretary in the Interior ministry Mutea Iringo on Sunday said he was yet to
receive information on the plight of the crew, but said he would check with the
police.
They
lost contact with the deportees after they arrived in Nigeria, the PS, under
whose ministry Immigration falls, said.
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