Shortly before they were bundled into the plane yesterday, one of the 
Nigerians deported from the UK spoke to Detained Voices, a site which 
shares stories, experiences and demands made by people held in 
immigration detention centres in the UK or those who have family members
 or partners in detention. Read his story after the cut...
 Basically, the charter flight is for today and they’re trying to get us
 on the flight. But here lies the problem. We all know very well, 
according to the rules anyway, if they want to take us they have to get 
travel documents for all of us. But then they have already issued travel
 certificates for everybody without anybody actually signing for it. How
 does that work? Obviously there have been allegations this week against
 the home office and against the Nigerian embassy about, you know 
bribary, to make sure she issues travel documents for people without 
their knowledge, you understand what I mean. According to the 
information we are getting, each person gets £3000. Basically, all of us
 have been sold to the British Government to do whatever they wants to 
do to us.
We’ve been very calm. We’ve asked them can you get the home office to 
explain how they’ve got travel documents for us when we didn’t sign for 
it. Obviously that’s fraud because I haven’t signed for anything. How 
are we supposed to follow the rules and regulation when those rules and 
regulations of the Home Office clearly doesn’t apply to them. They 
actually break the law on a regular basis. They bribe people on a 
regular basis.
Half of the people on the flight today have family here. They shouldn’t 
be going to Nigeria in the first place. I left Nigeria 17 years ago, 
right, I was 9 years old when I left Nigeria. I had only really lived in
 Nigeria for 6 years. And you are telling me it’s okay you can go back 
there. To where? My dad passed away last month. Who am I going back to? 
Who am I going back to? My sisters here, my brothers here. My niece has 
very big health problems. She’s got heart issues. They’re in London. She
 needs help on a regular basis. My sister cannot handle it.
We are just sat in the room basically. We are waiting for the officers 
to forcefully remove us. We are just in the room waiting. Because at the
 end of the day, they haven’t answered our questions.
 
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