During the
plenary presided over by the Speaker of the House, Femi Gbajabiamila, the lawmakers
considered a motion on the “Maltreatment and Institutional Acts of Racial
Discrimination against Nigerians Living in China by the Government of China”.
Members of
Nigeria’s House of Representatives on Tuesday said they will investigate the
legality of Chinese nationals living in Nigeria for possible repatriation to
their country.
The Reps made
the resolution on Tuesday at their plenary following their return from
five-week recess amid outbreak of coronavirus in the country.
The motion
was sponsored by 10 lawmakers – Benjamin Kalu, Yusuf Buba, John Dyegh, Babajimi
Benson, Tunji Olawuyi, Zakari Galadima, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, Nnoli Nnaji, Dennis
Idahosa, and Tolu Shadipe.
This followed
the poor treatment of Nigerians in China, especially those living in Guangzhou.
The lawmakers
mandated the House Committees on Interior, Nigeria Content Development and
Monitoring, as well as Commerce, to take up the assignment.
The House
asked the committees to investigate the Nigeria Immigration Service, Corporate
Affairs Commission (CAC), Nigerian Content and Development Monitoring Board,
and any other relevant Ministry, Department or Agency (MDA), to check the
validity of all immigration documents of every Chinese national in Nigeria.
It further
ordered the committees to probe the expatriate quota of all Chinese businesses
in Nigeria to ascertain the number of illegal and undocumented immigrants in
the country and ensure they were repatriated to China to regularise.
The lawmakers
said this would be in collaboration with the Immigration, Nigeria Customs
Service, the CAC, and relevant MDAs.
The House of
Representatives also resolved to urge the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and all
relevant MDAs to ensure that all categories of Nigerians who wished to return
home were evacuated from China and quarantined upon arrival.
The lawmakers
urged the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice and all
relevant MDAs to provide necessary financial and other assistance to affected
Nigerians 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.
Channels TV
reports that the lawmakers asked the Committees on Inter-Parliamentary
Relations Foreign Affairs, Human Rights and Diaspora, to ascertain the extent
of violation of rights of Nigerians in China, as well as losses arising from
such maltreatment.
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