Nigerian faces deportation from Ireland
Pamela
Izevbekhai argued her two daughters would be subjected to female genital
mutilation if returned to Nigeria
but the documentation she used to support her case was found to be fake.
The
court found Ms Izevbekhai and her husband were financially and socially
privileged in Nigeria
with a villa, three cars and house help and they could protect their children.
Ms
Izevbekhai would not comment on her case when contacted in Sligo.
The
Department of Justice has confirmed it received the European Court of Human
Rights judgement in her case in recent days.
In
a statement, the Minister said his officials are preparing a report for him on
this and its consequences for the individual in question. He said he would not
be making further comment until he received it.
Ms
Izevbekhai arrived in Ireland
with her daughters, Naomi and Jemima, using false passports in January 2005.
She
claimed she had a daughter, Elizabeth, in 1993 who was subjected to female
genital mutilation and died as a result of complications.
Ms
Izevbekhai went through the normal asylum process, which found there was no
concrete foundation for her concerns. She then began pursuing her case through
the courts.
Deportation
orders were signed in 2005, but she went into hiding to avoid arrest and her
daughters were taken into care.
She
was later arrested but released and given leave to apply for a judicial review.
The
following year the Minister for Justice went to the Supreme Court with evidence
that documents submitted by Mrs Izevbekhai relating to her daughter Elizabeth
were forgeries.
She
later admitted this was true but said her husband had sourced them, she
submitted further documentation but most of these were also found to be fake.
According to investigations, inquiries by the
garda national immigration unit in Nigeria
uncovered apparent discrepancies in the case presented by Pamela Izevbekhai to
the High Court and Supreme Court in Dublin
and to the European Court of Human Rights.
A
Nigerian obstetrician also dismissed a document, allegedly signed by him, as a
forgery. He also rejected Mrs Izevbekhai's claim that she gave birth to a
daughter, Elizabeth, in February 1993 and that the girl died on July 16, 1994,
following female genital mutilation.
The
findings represent a potentially serious blow to the prospects of Mrs
Izevbekhai overturning a Supreme Court decision supporting her deportation in
her appeal to the European Court of Human Rights.
Consultant
In
an affidavit lodged with the European
Court in Strasbourg,
consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist Dr Joseph Unokanjo, who practises at Isioma Hospital,
in Lagos, says
he can confirm that no baby called Elizabeth Izevbekhai was delivered by him at
the hospital and no baby of that name has ever been treated by him for any
ailment, including post-circumcision complications. Gar- dai were also told
there is no evidence of Elizabeth's death at the
registry of deaths in Lagos,
although a death certificate was presented to the Irish courts on behalf of Mrs
Izevbekhai.
A
Nigerian doctor faulted the document purported to have been signed by him
Dr
Unokanjo says he did not sign an affidavit purported to have been sworn by him
on March 9, 2006, and did not issue a certificate of cause of death, which
purported to come from Isioma hospital on July 17, 1994. Confirming the
signatures are not his, he also says he is incorrectly described on that
affidavit as a surgeon, and that the hospital stamp and hospital address are
false. He emphasises the purported affidavit was not made by him and says he
believes it is a forgery.
Dr
Unokanjo has practised at Isioma hospital since 1992, when it was founded, and
is a medical director there.
He
says Pamela Izevbekhai was his patient before she married and at the time was
known as Enitan West, and after her marriage as Enitan Izevbekhai.
Dr
Unokanjo also says Mrs Izevbekhai had her first baby at Isioma Hospital
in 2000. He was her attending doctor and he could confirm that it was her first
child.
Asylum
He
recalled that Pamela Enitan Izevbekhai telephoned him some years ago requesting
him to issue a death certificate in respect of a dead child to enable her to be
given asylum in the Republic of Ireland. He told her he did not involve himself
in such activities, particularly since he was aware that she neither had a baby
before 1999, and nor had she lost a baby.
Dr
Unokanjo also states the alleged medical certificate of the 'cause of death' is
a forgery.
Paul
McHenry, third secretary at the Irish Embassy in Abuja,
Nigeria, describes how he
had been shown that the registry of deaths in the Surulere district in Lagos for 1994 showed
only 55 entries but the certificate produced for Elizabeth Izevbekhai was
entered as number 56.
Ms Izevbekhai's final appeal was to the
European court of human rights.
source: African Outlook
The lies the costs the expense caused by this women is beyond reprehension.
ReplyDelete