News
Persecution
of a Nigerian Citizen, Abdullahi Suleiman Ahman, by the
Authorities of Saudi Arabia
Written
by Col. Abubakar Dangiwa Umar (Rtd)
Our
attention has been drawn to a very bizarre story of an innocent
Nigerian 22 year old Abdullahi Suleiman Ahman who is being held
in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia against his will. His plight
defies all logic and his ordeal is without a parallel in its
cruelty, impunity and discrimination. It behoves the Nigerian
Government and all people of goodwill everywhere to act quickly
to secure his immediate release.
Facts
available to us indicate that the mother of Abdullahi Suleiman
Ahman, Saratu Ahman, a devout Muslim Widow, decided to reward
him with a pilgrimage to Mecca following his successful
graduation in June 2010 from the IGBINEDION UNIVERSITY, OKADA,
NIGERIA. On the 7th of September 2010, they both
left Nigeria for Mecca. Upon their arrival at the Jeddah
International Airport, like everyone else, they joined the queue
for the required immigration documentation. Unlike everyone
else however, at that point, their journey took an unexpected,
frightening course.
“As soon as
the immigration officer finished reviewing Abdullahi travel
documents”, we were told, “he asked him to step aside while he
got busy making phone calls. A few minutes later, some Saudi
Arabian policemen arrived at the counter. The immigration
official pointed at Abdullahi and was immediately handcuffed and
led away – to the utter shock and bewilderment of his mother.
Her attempt to follow them was rebuffed. She turned to the
immigration officer and sought to know why her son was arrested
and to where he was being taken.
The only
explanation grudgingly offered by the officer got her even more
bewildered that the boy “duped” a Saudi Prince in an airline
business contract signed way back in 2007; at which time
Abdullahi was just a 19 years old undergraduate and most
unlikely to have been involved in any such business. Besides,
there was no evidence that he visited Saudi Arabia in 2007.
Her attempts
to prove to the immigration officer that her son was a victim of
mistaken identity were ignored. Instead, she was shouted down
and ordered to leave. Aware of the limited rights she had as a
woman and a Nigerian to engage Saudi officials, Saratu Obeyed
the order and left; sobbing.
Twenty four
hours later, at the police station, Saratu found her son totally
disoriented and frightened. This was indeed to be expected
given the public perception of the boy as an obedient, shy and
diligent who would always be counted upon to stay out of
trouble. Still, beyond what she was told by the immigration
officer at the airport, no further explanation or information
was offered. And, as it turned out, Abdullahi’s arraignment in
court was not done until nine clear days. The reason was that
the Saudi Prince who lodged the complaint failed to show up in
court.
Eventually he
was charged with breaching an airline business contract entered
into between him and the representative of a Saudi Prince some
three years ago. After the charge was read, the defense counsel
drew the attention of the court to several discrepancies in the
document, including names, nationalities, addresses etc between
the real owner of the defendant company and the person being
prosecuted. The Lawyer tendered a copy of the contract document
under reference.
The terms and
conditions of the contract indicated that it was signed on 3rd
of November, 2007 between one Mr. FAHD bin SILIMAN bin HASSAN
ASHAR, a Saudi national representing a company owned by a Saudi
Arabian Prince, HRH, TURKI bin ABDULLAH bin ABDULAZIZ ASSAUD and
Mr. ABDOULAYE DIORI HAMANI, owner of an Air Niamey carrier and a
citizen of Niger Republic. The Air Niamey carrier agreed to pay
a commission of USD 100 per passenger to the Saudi company for
its services. The Niamey carrier also agreed to pay USD 3
Million (Three Million Dollars) as penalty if it failed to
implement the agreement.
The
prosecutor agreed with the submissions of the defense counsel
whereupon the judge asked the signatory to the contract, Fahd
bin Siliman bin Ashar, to identity and confirm that the person
charged as the true culprit. He responded by saying he could
not; adding that he never really met the owner of Niamey Air.
After several other failed attempts to confirm the identity of
the alleged offender, the complainants finally confessed that
Abdullahi Ahman was indeed not the same person as Abdoulaye
Diori Hamani with whom they entered into a contract that was now
in breach. That being the case, the court discharged and
acquitted Abdullahi Ahman and ordered his travel documents be
released to him. The judge also ordered that the travel ban
order on him he lifted immediately.
To his utter
amazement and that of his long suffering mother however, his
discharge and acquittal by the court did little to case his
troubles much less restore his freedoms. For, inspire of the
court judgment, when they got to the Jeddah Airport, expecting
to depart Saudi Arabia for Nigeria, the immigration officials
told them they couldn’t go, the travel ban was still firmly in
place! Not only did the Saudi officials prevent them from
leaving, they became deaf to all their explanations and pleas.
Exhausted and cash strapped, they made their way back to the
town and began to look for a way to survive as best as they
could.
Family and
friends in Jeddah and in Sokoto mobilized and pooled various
donations to enable mother and son to survive under conditions
worse than hostages.
As it turned
out, their new ordeal was caused by a uniquely Saudi legal
conundrum: the Ministry of Justice is require to communicate (a
duty they neglected to do), the decision of the court on
Abdullahi Ahman to the Jaddah police authorities. Having failed
to do so, the task to try to get the two departments of
government to communicate to each other, was left to the
victims’.
They were
finally successful. The Ministry dispatched the letter on the 1st
of December 2010, clear six weeks after the first attempt to
leave the country. Armed with the Ministry’s letter a copy of
which they were able to obtain 3 weeks after it was dispatched,
they returned to what they now consider a scene of crime- Jeddah
international Airport on the 28th of January 2011. It
was their third attempt to leave.
Yet, no
luck Reason? Abdullahi Ahman’s name still popped up on their
computer as a dupe against whom a travel ban order was
subsisting.
For all
practical purposes, Abdullahi (and his mother Saratu) Suleiman
Ahman, are being held prisoners by the authorities of the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia even though they have broken no laws
within or outside that country. One will of course be tempted
to ask whatever did the Nigerian embassy in Riyadh do to save
this innocent Nigerian from unjust punishment and discrimination
by the authorities of Saudi Arabia. In any event, all those
familiar with the way Saudi authorities treat issues concerning
Nigerians and Africans in general; this is really begging the
question. For long the relationship between Saudi Arabia and
Black African nations has been characterized by utter contempt,
stereotyping and racial discrimination. The Saudi authorities
could never treat an American or European citizen in the same
way they are treating Abdullahi Ahman. Nor has the Nigerian
embassy in Riyadh any influence with the Saudi government that
they can apply to protect their nationals from unjust
punishment. For sure no one can be subjected to this sort of
abuse in the Vatican.
Yet, as we
said before, Saudi Arabia’s continuing refusal to play by
acceptable code of international conduct and denial of peoples’
right to personal liberty and freedom must stop. People of good
conscience everywhere and in particular the Nigerian government
has a duty to free Abdullahi Suleiman Ahman without further
delay. It is an undisputed fact of history but which does bear
repeating: When the rights of one man are denied, the rights of
all are reduced.
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