Following verdict delivered by the
Confederation of African Football in response to the complaint lodged by the
Nigeria Football Federation over the recent inhumane treatment meted out to the
Super Eagles in Libya, members of the Nigerian community have reported mass
arrests and fines in the country.
The Nigerian football team was held at the Al-Abraq
Airport in eastern Libya for over 20 hours upon arrival for the second leg of
the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier between the Super Eagles and Libya’s
national team.
The contingent was scheduled to land at the Benghazi
Airport and travel for nearly four hours by road to Benina, where the match was
to be played.
However, less than an hour before landing, the
Tunisian pilot reportedly received a directive from Libyan authorities to
divert the flight to the Al-Abraq Airport, located 150 miles away from the
destination.
The development sparked widespread outrage, forcing
the NFF to withdraw the Super Eagles from the qualifying match and file an
official complaint to CAF.
In its ruling on Saturday, October 26, signed by its
Chairman, Ousmane Kane, the disciplinary committee of the African football body
awarded the Super Eagles of Nigeria three points and three goals for the
abandoned match.
The disciplinary board ruled that the Libyan Football
Federation breached Article 31 of the Africa Cup of Nations Regulations and
Articles 82 and 151 of the CAF Disciplinary Code.
The panel also ordered the LFF to pay a fine of
$50,000 within 60 days of the notification of the decision.
Displeased with the verdict, the LFF President Nasser
Al-Suwai’I described it as “unjust and malicious,” alleging that the NFF’s
influence within CAF played a major role in the outcome.
A report on Monday by a Libyan outlet, Libyan
Observer, quoted Al-Suwai’I saying the LFF would file an official appeal within
hours and that if the appeal was denied, the body would resort to the Court of
Arbitration for Sport to ensure “their legitimate rights are secured.”
Campaign against Nigerians
Following the CAF ruling, a popular Libyan news blog,
Libya News Today 1, posted on Sunday, stating, “All Libyan TV channels are
urging the government to arrest the Nigerian workers who are working here in
Libya without legal papers. They have to pay $500 plus taxes.
“The fine that Libya is accused of will be paid by
Nigerian citizens who live in Libya. We have been subjected to injustice. We
have no borders with Nigeria. What benefit are they to us? They’re a burden on
the Libyan people. They have to go back home.”
The blog has more than 188,000 followers on Facebook
and 57,000 likes.
The post was accompanied by a video of a Libyan TV
presenter, who said, “Anyone who is living in Libya and working without paying
tax is eating haram, which means sinful money. The government should make every
effort to arrest all Nigerians who are working in Libya so that they can pay a
tax of $500 and regulate their stay in the country by obtaining residence
permits.”
Another Libyan site, Libya INF.TV, reported that
Libyan stations wanted the government to start arresting Nigerian workers.
“Those who don’t have Libyan papers will have to pay a
fine of $500 for taxes. If you refuse deportation, no mercy. The Libyan
government will pay the Nigerian government from their citizens’ money,” the
post said.
Mass arrests
Speaking with Sunday PUNCH, a Nigerian living in
Tripoli, the Libyan capital, Adenaike Emmanuel, said the arrests began on
Sunday after the CAF statement was released in the country.
“They have already started. The news came out on
Saturday, and they were saying they can’t accept it and that they are not the
ones who will pay the money. They have started proving this.
“Someone called me and said they had already begun
arresting people in his area. The same thing is happening here in Tripoli. In
some places, people were arrested on Sunday morning and afternoon. As I
mentioned before, Libyans don’t hide their feelings. They believe that by doing
this, they are getting their revenge,” Adenaike stated.
The President of the Nigerian community in Libya,
Peter Omoregbie, also confirmed the arrests in a video shared by multiple
Libya-based Nigerian blogs during the week.
Omoregbie, who confirmed this while making an official
report at the Libyan immigration office on Monday, said, “The arrests started
on Sunday night in some areas in Tedora. They are arresting innocent people.
They don’t even care whether you have passports or residence permits. They just
don’t care, which doesn’t happen in other countries.”
When asked to provide background to the incident, he
said, “The football body is an association on its own, which the government
isn’t supposed to interfere with according to CAF laws. There was a football
match scheduled between Nigeria and Libya on October 15. Nigeria was supposed
to arrive in Benghazi, but they were diverted to another state, so the match
could not take place. The Nigerian football team then returned home. Since
then, CAF has investigated the issue and set up a committee to find out what
really happened.
“Yesterday, the verdict was issued that Libya has to
pay a fine of $50,000 to CAF due to the way they treated the Nigerian football
team. Now, on social media, Libyan journalists and numerous bloggers are saying
that Nigeria will be made to pay the $50,000 fine by arresting all Nigerians in
Libya. But in other countries, nothing like that happens.
“As the community leader, I received some videos
showing that the arrests started last night in the Tedora area. They said the
Libyan police have started arresting Nigerians, whether they have passports or
not. Some of us are already afraid, calling everywhere to ask what to do.
Sometimes, as community leaders, we are helpless. Even the Nigerian Embassy’s
hands are sometimes tied. But international bodies need to intervene in this
situation.”
Two days after Omoregbie’s report, another Nigerian in
the country, Omo Oba Legba, said the arrests had intensified.
In a Facebook video posted on Wednesday, he said, “My
Arab master, who is a policeman, just called me now and told me not to go out
to buy anything because they have started arresting Nigerians in Libya. I asked
him, ‘What about those with Libyan passports?’ But he said they aren’t
considering passports and that anyone who is Nigerian will be arrested. That’s
why I decided to alert our people so they know how far this issue has gone.
“The Super Eagles had what they needed to and
returned. They got their money, whether they won or not. But see the problem
they’ve caused for us. If Nigeria was good, we wouldn’t have come to Libya to
suffer. The Nigerian team only faced a day of hardship—what about other
Nigerians here who face the same treatment every day? My Arab told me that
until the CAF fine is overturned, they won’t stop arresting Nigerians. Please,
we appeal to the Nigerian government to come to our aid.”
Similarly, Libya INF.TV posted a video on Thursday
where a Nigerian pleaded with the Libyan police to stop the indiscriminate
arrests.
He said, “Football has nothing to do with us. If you
want to catch them, catch them when they come here. Leave us out of this. And
to the Nigerian team, I don’t know what you’re thinking, coming here to play
football with the Libyan people. You don’t have sense. Please, Libyan police,
please.”
Libyan rights institution warns security agents
Meanwhile, the Chairman of the National Institution
for Human Rights in Libya, Ahmed Hamza, has warned against retaliatory acts
targeting Nigerian workers in the country in the aftermath of the CAF ruling.
According to Libya Review, Hamza noted that some media
platforms were inciting hostility towards foreigners by portraying them as
illegal or irregular residents.
“We warn against any form of retaliation against
foreign and migrant workers in Libya, especially Nigerian workers, by security
forces, armed groups, or citizens,” Hamza stated.
He cautioned that unlawful actions against foreigners
could lead to repercussions in domestic and even international justice.
When Sunday PUNCH contacted the Libyan Embassy in
Abuja for comments, a lady who identified herself simply as Rose said she was
not authorised to talk.
She said, “As you can see, I am not the media
secretary. Whatever information you need, kindly put it into writing and send
it to the embassy. Then, they will respond to it. Address the letter to the
ambassador of the Libyan embassy.”
Our correspondent wrote a letter of inquiry to the
embassy as requested. However, 48 hours later, there was no response.
A request for information from the Nigerian Embassy in
Tripoli was also not replied to as of press time.
When contacted, the spokesperson for the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, Eche Abu-Obe, simply said, “I have sent a message to the
Director Africa.”
The Nigerians in Diaspora Commission had yet to
respond to calls and a text message from Sunday PUNCH as of the time of filing
this report.
Ex-envoy urges probe
A former Nigerian ambassador to Mexico, Ogbole
Amedu-Ode, said the Federal Government should investigate the retaliatory
arrests and report Libya to the African Union.
He said, “The Nigerian government doesn’t have
hardcore evidence, and if they do, they should report Libya to the African
Union. If Nigerians collate evidence of the maltreatment, the Federal
Government can protest directly to the Libyan government over what Nigerians
are facing.”
Amedu-Ode further advised Nigerians in the Arab
country to keep low profiles until the situation was under control.
“If the atmosphere is too hot for them, they should
leave Libya,” he added.
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