Former Special
Adviser, Media and Publicity to ex-president Jonathan Reuben Abati share his
thoughts…..
I am not a fan of Donald Trump, the
incumbent President of the United States. I didn’t stand with him. I stood with
her- Hillary Clinton- in the last US Presidential election. No other election
in recent American history has been more international in terms of interest and
emotional involvement.
Trump’s election even divided the Nigerian middle
class. Majority of Christians in Nigeria
stood with Donald Trump. They liked his anti-Muslim rhetoric, and in a country
where religion is such a volatile subject and the Christian community feels as
if it is under siege from radical Islamic extremism, it was easy for a category
of Nigerians to see Trump’s politics being in sync with their own fears and
expectations.
Pro-secessionist, Biafran and Christian
protesters in the South East also supported Trump. On his Inauguration Day,
they organized a rally, some of them were killed, in the process, by Nigerian
security agents. It is always so easy to
read American politics into every other politics globally because of America’s
status as a superior power and the global dominance of its culture. Many Nigerians who opposed Hillary Clinton of
the Democratic Party also did so, for example, for partisan reasons, because
they felt the Democratic administration of President Barrack Obama was
responsible in many ways for the outcome of the 2015 Presidential election in
Nigeria.
They wanted a pound of flesh – they wanted the
Democrats out of the White House, the same way the PDP exited Aso Villa. The
funny thing is that Nigerians who do not hold American citizenship, were not in
a position to vote in the US election, but this didn’t deter us from weeping
more than the Americans. In my case, I opposed Trump because I consider him a
vile, navel-gazing, crude, child-like nativist, whose Presidency could pose a
threat to the free world.
I have been proven right. The United
States is in trouble because of Donald Trump.
In less than two weeks in office, President Trump has signed executive
orders, which amount to an assault on the liberal international order. America
is great because it became the dreamland and the symbol of freedom, prosperity
and fulfillment for persons and families across the world. It is great because
it became the melting pot for global genius, the preferred destination for
generations of talented persons in all fields of human endeavour. America is
great because its diversity and multiculturalism became pillars of its
exceptionalism.
Donald Trump, on twitter where he
spends his waking hours, and on the podium, where he rants, says his ambition
is to “Make America Great Again” (#MAGA), but it is beginning to look as if
Trump will end up making America small.
The Executive Orders which he has signed so far, are intended to upturn
America’s foreign policy in the last 50 years, isolate the country from the
rest of the world and turn it into an island. America appears destined to
become a pariah state for the next four years. With Trump, America now sees the
rest of the world as an ocean of enemies, with this persecution complex dressed
up as national interest.
The most pernicious of the Executive
Orders is Trump’s suspension of the US refugee programme for four months and
the entry ban for 90 days imposed on nationals from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia,
Sudan, Syria and Yemen. Is the action legal?
Section 212(f) of the US Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) (1952)
empowers the President to restrict immigration access to the United States:
“Whenever the President finds that the entry of any aliens or of any class of
aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the
United States, he may by proclamation, and for such period as he shall deem
necessary suspend the entry of all aliens or any class of aliens as immigrants
and non-immigrants or impose on the entry of aliens any restrictions he may
deem to be appropriate.” The sentiment
behind this legal provision is protectionism, which is ironic in a country of
immigrants.
This is Donald Trump keeping his
campaign promise to protect America for Americans and review immigration
policies. Is this new? No. Over the years, America has always tried to control
the influx of immigrants. This was the
case even under President Barack Obama. Trump reminds us of the 1882 Chinese
Exclusion Act which turned back the Chinese, and a similar law in 1924, which
targeted Asian and African immigrants, both of which were corrected by the
Immigration Act of 1965, which forbids discrimination on the basis of national
origin, ancestry and race. The only
problem is that Trump’s approach is crazy, a case of policy mixed with bigotry
and narcissism, and an unconstitutional gambit which violates the First
Amendment, hidden under the banner of “protecting the nation from foreign
terrorist entry.” Given the contradictions
between the 1952 and 1965 Acts and the First Amendment, Trump’s actions are
perhaps better tested in the court of law.
He wants to build a wall at the
Mexican border. This has already caused
a rift with Mexico. He is also holding radical Islam responsible for security
breaches in the United States, and this is certainly because foreign-born
Muslims have been responsible for many acts of terror in the US: the 9/11, the
Boston bombing, the Nigerian underwear bomber; across Europe, radical Islamic
extremism has also proven to be a problem.
Trump’s solution is to demonize Muslim-majority countries and arrive at
the simple solution that the best way to protect America is to shut out the
Muslims. He insists that “This is not
about religion – this is about terror and keeping our country safe. There are
40 different countries worldwide that are majority Muslim that are not affected
by this order.” I don’t believe him.
The chosen seven countries that have
been shut out have not in any way been responsible for most of the acts of
terror in the US in recent times. Trump
leaves out Egypt, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, and other Muslim-majority
countries, but the kind of chaos that has been generated makes every Muslim
going to the United States vulnerable. You don’t have to be from the seven
targeted countries, once you bear a Muslim name, you could be subjected to
greater scrutiny by Customs and Border Protection Officers. Some of the people who have been harassed at
the borders since last Friday when the Executive Order was passed are American
citizens with dual nationality.
While Donald Trump is proposing
greater vetting and scrutiny of the influx of Muslims, and refugees, he is
nevertheless willing to allow more Christians into the United States. This is
the message that comes across: Christians are welcome. Muslims should be
carefully scrutinized before they are allowed in. In other words, Christians
are better than Muslims. This may sound
like an over-simplification, but that is just how it is. President Trump is
likely to make the United States more unpopular in the Muslim world, damage
established friendships and promote a culture of hate that has proven a threat
to American foreign relations in parts of the world.
American liberals are justifiably
upset and angry. President Trump’s policy moves and rhetoric depart from the
America they have known for the past 50 years.
But right now, America is so divided, nobody can comfortably sit on the
fence, and that is why public opinion is so viciously divided too. Trump
addresses the fears of those Americans who, like him, don’t want more
immigrants and asylum seekers. This is the ultimate rise of American xenophobia
and an attempt to turn that country into “a camp of saints.” But there are limits to nativism as seen in
Jean Raspail’s novel, The Camp of the Saints (1973) and The Slums of Aspen:
Immigrants vs. The Environment (2011) by Lisa Park and David Pellow.
But no matter the tone of global
outrage, Donald Trump obviously doesn’t give a damn. Mexico has cancelled a
meeting with Trump, a protest calling for signatures to prevent his proposed
state visit to the UK has attracted over a million signatures, Iran is
threatening reciprocal action, the entire Muslim world is outraged and inside
America, California is threatening to secede because of Trump! And Trump? He
wants to be President of the United States, not President of the world. He
wants to serve the American people who voted him into power, not some
immigrants coming from the slums of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle
East. Across the world, there are
millions who look up to the United States as the land of freedom. Trump is
saying America is no longer ready to be the world’s Atlas nation. It is not just immigration that will be affected:
trade, aid, military relations as well.
This has created a regime of fear among many who depend on the United
States.
There are millions of Africans living
in the United States, particularly Nigerians.
They don’t all have the papers granting them the right of stay. There
are asylum seekers, refugees and many who are still processing their residency
papers. An American for Americans only policy is likely to place them at the
risk of rejection and eventual deportation. When you talk to some of them, you
can actually sense panic, fear, despair. They panic because America has become
their adopted home. It is their place of work, their source of hope, and the
best place in the world where they are happiest.
They panic because their original
homeland offers them little hope. They don’t want to return to a Nigeria where
there is no regular power supply, employment opportunities, good roads,
communications or transportation system. Living in America confers a special
status on them among friends, family members and the community at home.
There are others who are already naturalized
Americans, and who may have nothing to fear, and there are those Nigerians who
have helped to build America with their talents and intellect, and who don’t
really care on what side of the bed Donald Trump is likely to wake up tomorrow
morning.
Then you have the big crowd of
I-must-go-to-America-by-force set of Nigerians who are daily trooping to the
American embassy in search of visa. Since the Executive Order by President
Trump, that crowd has not been smiling at all. I know many of our compatriots
who have suddenly become experts in analyzing American immigration rules. Nigeria is not one of the seven countries on
the Trump list and the review and restriction are supposed to last for 120
days, but long-time US visa applicants in Nigeria believe that what a typical
American immigration officer has actually been looking for is a President like
Trump. An inconsolable applicant tells me he is no longer sure he will ever get
a visa to the United States.
I assured him that the world will
always need America and America will always need the world. Isolationism discounts the ideal of an
interconnected global order. President
Donald Trump’s success will be determined in the long run not by the arrows he
shoots in the international arena from North Korea, to China, to Mexico and
Somalia, but how well he fulfills the promise to make America greater than he
met it. If they don’t want you to stay in America, come home, please. Stay at
home, e go better… or go to Canada or Taiwan.

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