COVID-19: 200 US-based Nigerians are willing to be evacuated – Minister

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Foreign Affairs Minister, Geoffrey Onyeama

No fewer than 200 Nigerians in the United States are now willing to be evacuated to Nigeria over coronavirus, Geoffrey Onyeama, minister of foreign affairs, said.

Onyeama who made this known on Wednesday said the presidential task force on COVID-19 has been putting measures in place to receive Nigerians who want to return.

According to him, “The presidential task force under the chairmanship of the secretary to the government of the federation (SGF) has actually been engaging with this when there was a closure of the airport.

READ ALSO: Coronavirus: Foreigners leaving Nigeria to use their health facilities – Minister

“So, the response was not as a result of letters coming in from Nigerians in the diaspora as has been mentioned in some media houses.  

“At that time, we did not have all our isolation centres in place and all the other logistical arrangements in place. So for that reason, we’ve kept it in abeyance while we were putting all those things in place and hence now.

“We have sufficient beds and so forth and protocol is no well established, and we now feel much stronger and in a better position to undertake this herculean task of trying to see how we can bring Nigerians outside the country back into the country. 

“In that context, we’ve now started to get great numbers of Nigerians especially in the United States where almost 200 have now indicated and are willing to return. We are engaging with our embassies in China and the high commission in London and also in France to work out all the logistics. Things are now falling in place, and we are getting a sense of what needs to be done.”

The minister also said 67 Nigerians, traveling through land from neighbouring countries are on their way to the Nigeria. Onyeama, however, said the travellers would be isolated before giving them freedom.

He said: “We have 67 Nigerians including children and women. They were in Cote D’ivoire and we needed to engage with the government of Togo, the government of Benin for them to be able to go through.

“And they are now at the Ngerian border and we got the authorisation for them to come into the country and they would be in isolation for the mandatory 14 day.”

 

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