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Okey Ndibe
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Fiery columnist with The Sun Publishing
Limited, Dr. Okey Ndibe, was on Saturday
night arrested by Nigerian security
operatives as he arrived the country from
his United States base.
No reason has been given for his arrest but
the operatives immediately seized Ndibe’s
travelling documents, including his American
passport.
He was arrested at about 8:45p.m and later
released at about 11:45p.m. However, he was
asked to report at the State Security
Service (SSS) office today where he is to
meet with senior operatives of the service
and probably know what his offences are.
Speaking on the arrest, Ndibe asserted that
he came to Nigeria for a family commitment.
His flight, according to him, arrived the
Murtala International Airport, Ikeja, Lagos
at 8:45p.m. As soon as he alighted from the
aircraft, some security operatives accosted
him and said he needed to speak with the
SSS. He was thereafter led to the first
floor office of the SSS.
His words: “One of the SSS officials took my
passport and asked me to take my luggage. On
getting to the office, he made entries into
a computer from my passport and asked if I
had other passports. I said yes that I was
also an American citizen. He took the
passport as well. He also made numerous
phone calls.”
Ndibe revealed that the question: “Are you a
journalist?” was thrown at him and he
answered: “I teach but I also do a weekly
column with `Daily Sun which is also
online.”
The columnist maintained that the SSS
official later made more phone calls before
he was released at 11:45p.m but was asked to
return to the office today. Ndibe is a
Professor of English Language and teaches as
a full time lecturer at the Trinity College,
Hartford, Connecticut. He is also a part
time lecturer at the Brown University in
Providence, Rhode Island, where the Nigerian
literary giant, Professor Chinua Achebe also
lectures.
He averred that the US passport was a
property of the United States government,
which the Nigerian government should not
withdraw from anybody. Nigerian government,
he said, could only confiscate Nigerian
passports, adding that there was no way he
would leave behind his Nigerian passport and
travel. Asked what he perceived as the
motive behind the development, Ndibe
declared: “The only indication was that in
late 2008, I got an anonymous tip-off that I
should not come to Nigeria, that there was
an order to arrest me at any entry point.”
Ndibe, however, said few days into the
regime of President Goodluck Jonathan, there
was a policy statement that human rights
would be respected. He said word also came
that the order on people like him had been
lifted.
“I was not altogether surprised. Governments
make commitments that they don’t keep. At
least, in the area of human rights. There
are in Nigeria today other more pressing
things than harassing writers. “I will
continue to write the way I write; I write
for the propagation and deepening of
democracy in my country and offer no
apologies for that. I have not broken any
law and have no cause to worry,” he stated.
A senior SSS source told Daily Sun that
Ndibe might have been put on the action list
of the last administration in the country.
He explained that the statutory order was to
pick and escort Ndibe to the headquarters of
the security agency. The order, he
disclosed, was modified to talk to him, take
his passports and let him go.
According to the officer, the new thinking
at the SSS was that things had to be done
more orderly, with utmost respect for human
rights and due process.
On the particular offence that Ndibe might
have committed, the source answered with an
African proverb: “When a mother straps a
child on her back when she is going to the
farm, she will not know all the leaves the
child will pluck on the way.” While saying
that the offence might be anything, he
revealed that a particular agency had
requested that Ndibe should be picked up.
Fielding questions on why Ndibe’s US
passport was seized, he said it was taken
from him with other travelling documents so
that he would not use it to escape from the
country. Seizure of the passport, he stated,
should not be an issue because it’s an
elementary procedure to take hold of such
travel documents and not necessarily an
affront on any country that issued them.
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