More
awareness of ECOWAS free movement please
Godwin
Elendu: Five years after he was bundled off British Airways plane over
non-possession of Ghanaian visa, this Nigerian passenger came close to an
encore at Air France
Five
years after he was bundled off an Accra ,
Ghana-bound British Airways plane in London , Nigerian-born Dr.
Godwin Elendu almost suffered the same fate at the hands of Air France operatives in France
while trying to board a flight to Lome ,
Togo , five
weeks ago.
On
both occasions, Elendu was told to present a visa to enter Ghana and Togo
respectively or buy a connecting ticket to ensure he shall continue his travel
all the way to Nigeria .
Speaking with Travels inside his Lome
office recently, Elendu recalled that he was literally bundled off a British
Airways (BA) flight on September 5, 2008 because he didn't have a Ghanaian
visa.
Reminiscing
further on that unpleasant incident, Elendu said that, though he was heading to
Nigeria , he had paid for a
London-Accra ticket with the hope of later travelling by road from the Ghanaian
capital to Lagos .
Being Nigerian, Elendu does not need a visa to enter Ghana because of the ECOWAS
(Economic Community of West African States) Protocol on Free Movement of
Persons and Services. But, his attempt to explain this to BA authorities at Heathrow Airport
in London fell
on deaf ears. He was eventually off-loaded from the Accra-bound flight.
Enraged,
Elendu rushed to the Nigerian High Commission in the British capital hoping to
get redress through intervention by his country's diplomats, there. He thought
wrong. Hear him: "Shockingly, when I got to Nigerian High Commission in London and complained, I
met with cold shoulder." However, it must be pointed out, that this was in
the days before the Jonathan Presidency.
Elendu
again: "In fact, it turned out that the British Airways people were even
more polite. After I met with rebuff at Nigerian High Commission, I went back
to BA where one of the ticketing officers advised me to buy a connecting ticket
from Accra to Lagos; explaining that, with this connecting ticket, BA could not
stop me from flying to Accra over non-possession of Ghanaian visa."
Consequently, Elendu was forced to cough out an additional British £76 for an
Accra-Lagos ticket that he never came around to using.
"But,
before I was able to fly, after being forced into paying for an Accra-Lagos
ticket that I did not need, I was compelled to suffer additional unbudgetted
expenses by way of hotel bills. I had to check into a hotel at my expense
before I finally flew out of London
the next day," Elendu rued. After arrival in Accra ,
Elendu had eventually made his way to Nigeria by road and therefore had
no use for the Accra-Lagos ticket he had been compelled to buy in lieu of not
having a Ghanaian visa. He subsequently took the Accra-Lagos ticket to British
Airways for a refund. He did get something of a refund but lost about £20
British pounds as surcharge.
Interestingly,
more than five years after his unpleasant experience with BA, Elendu almost ran
into an encore with Air France
sometime in December 2012. After a business trip to some European countries,
Elendu wanted to return to Lome ,
Togo . However,
when he went to buy an Air France's Paris-Lome ticket; an attendant had told
him that he also needed to add a Lome-Lagos/Abuja connecting ticket to the
bargain; otherwise he would be off-loaded since he didn't have a Togolese visa.
However,
Elendu was eventually allowed to travel aboard that Air France flight to Lome without a Togolese
visa after presenting his residence permit. Evidently, whereas they are
familiar with the privileges of a Schengen Visa, European airlines'
functionaries seem ignorant of the fact that Nigerians do not need visa to
enter about 15 West African countries because of their status as ECOWAS
citizens. But, is it purely a case of ignorance or does it have to do with more
intricate or possible insidious issues?
If
ignorance were the reason, does it mean that ECOWAS needs to do more to educate
the world, including airline operators, about its Protocols; especially as it
relates to Free Movement of Persons and Services within the sub-region? Over
the last 20 years, Elendu has virtually traversed the world. Once upon a time,
his love of travel saw him hopping from destination to destination in different
countries across four continents within 10 days, all for the fun of it. Those
days, fares were cheap and because he was much younger; he didn't mind the
stress.
Today,
however, aside from the vagaries of aging, which means fatigue after some
long-haul flight as well as jet-lag from crossing vast longitudes; there are
other issues. Fares have skyrocketted and no thanks to terrorists, flying has
lost some of its sparkle. Yes, air-travel is no longer as pleasurable as it
used to be for Elendu, an entrepreneur and writer based in Lome . For this Nigerian in Diaspora, the
menace of terrorists mean that innocent people are overtly frisked and
sometimes intimidated, even harassed. As a result, Elendu is no longer as
frequently air-borne as he used to be. Albeit, he cannot completely do without
flying. When business calls for travelling, Elendu moves.
However,
he lamented that holders of the Nigerian passport are singled-out for harsh or
rude treatment. Consequently, Nigerian travellers, he believes, suffer more
than their fair share of stress. Elendu observed that, whereas nationals of numerous
other countries are treated politely at countless airports across the world; he
has suffered discrimination simply for carrying a Nigerian passport.
More
often than not, Nigerians; Elendu intoned, are given the rude treatment for no
just cause. Alayi, Abia State-born Elendu averred that, whereas Nigeria 's
Foreign Service was doing a lot to arrest incidents of maltreatment of
Nigerians at some countries' airports in recent years; a lot more remains to be
done before Nigerians are treated with deserved respect by the immigration
services and other security personnel at foreign airports.
The
Sun
No comments:
Post a Comment