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Trump Admin Seeks to Deport Deaf and Disabled Nigerian After 34 Years in U.S.

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Francis Anwana, Disabled Nigerian in U.S.

In what U.S. Immigration experts say is a virtual death sentence, the Trump administration is seeking to deport 48-year old deaf and disabled Nigerian who emigrated to the U.S. when he was just 14 years old.

Born and raised in Nigeria, Francis Anwana was deaf, could not talk and had other learning disabilities when he arrived in the United States. He enrolled at the Michigan School for the Deaf to learn to communicate effectively but experts say that has been difficult for him to do.

Currently living in a Detroit adult foster care facility, Mr. Anwana mows lawns and mops floors at a local area church, for a living

Susan Reed, an attorney with the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center confirmed that the U.S. wants to deport Anwana to Nigeria, a country he has not been to or lived in since he was a teenager.

And because of his severe disabilities, “it would be a virtual death sentence for him if he is deported,” she said.

Anwana can only read at a second-grade level and is unable to mentally grasp the fact he could be forced to go back to Nigeria even though the situation has been explained to him a number of times, according to immigration advocates and his lawyer.

‘With his condition, life in Nigeria will be very, very bad, and can lead to death for not receiving proper medical care.’

Francis Anwana, Disabled Nigerian in U.S.United States Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) told Anwana that he was getting deported on September 11, 2018, a decision that was put on hold after immigrant advocates in Michigan raised concerns.

ICE later told him his deportation has been put on hold but he was scheduled to meet with agents on a later date.

“This removal is not imminent at this time,” Khaalid Walls, spokesman for the Michigan ICE, confirmed later.

Despite having been in the United States for over 30 years, Mr. Anwana has been unable to gain citizenship, mainly due to his conditions and immigrant advocates who have been working on his case lost track of him a few years ago because he was constantly moved from among group homes.

He has no criminal record and his is not eligible for DACA, the Obama era immigration law that shields immigrant children from deportation, due to his age.

Diane Newman, an educator who has been assisting Anwana for years said Anwana was born in a village near Lagos to a large family. He was one of about 8 or 10 children.

“It was a very loving family,” Newman said. “But they understood they would not be able to provide him a life in Nigeria … as a handicapped person.”

“About a decade ago, someone tried to help him by applying for citizenship,” said Reed, the immigration attorney helping him.

“He was denied because he was ineligible, placed in deportation proceedings, and finally denied asylum, which he sought based on conditions for people with his condition in Nigeria.”

Anwana has said through sign language that he is happy living in the U.S., and could not understand what deportation is or why they would want to deport him back to Nigeria.

He said he loves watching soccer, basketball and helping with house chores. “He has been a model citizen,” said his immigration attorneys.

Attorney Reed told Detroit area media that Anwana “has lived in group homes and supportive environments for many years and won the love and friendship of many, but he has no family in the U.S.”

“His elderly mother in Nigeria has no ability to support him or meet any of his medical needs. He needs medication to manage his conditions.”

Fatou-Seydi Sarr, Social Justice and Human Rights Activist, and founder and executive director of African Bureau for Immigration and Social Affairs, a Michigan area advocacy group, said that “with his condition, life in Nigeria will be very, very bad, and can lead to death for not receiving proper medical care.”

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UK Nursing Council Probes 512 Nigerian Nurses Over Fraudulent Exam Results

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The Nursing and Midwifery Council of the United Kingdom

The Nursing and Midwifery Council of the United Kingdom has notified 512 registered nurses that they are being probed for illegally obtaining their registration.

The council said Friday that there is a high probability that the Nigerians committed fraud in obtaining their credentials.

According to the statement by the Council, to make sure internationally educated professionals have the right knowledge and skills to provide high-quality care in the UK, they must take a two-part test of competence before joining our register: a computer-based test (CBT) usually sat in their home country, and a practical test (OSCE) in the UK.

An organization called Pearson VUE runs the CBT program on the NMC’s behalf.

The Council said they were recently alerted to anomalous data “at one of its third-party CBT test centers in Ibadan, Nigeria. Pearson VUE stopped testing at this center immediately.”

“A total of 512 people on our register (around five percent of all the professionals on our register who qualified in Nigeria) took their CBT at this test center. We’re writing to them to set out what’s happened, and to tell them we’re opening cases to determine whether or not they gained fraudulent or incorrect entry to the register.

“More people have applied to join the register but are not yet on it, therefore they can’t practice as a nurse or midwife. We’ve paused their applications. We’re writing to these applicants to ask them to retake the test, and to request more information that we’ll use to make a final decision about their application.

“Our paramount concern is to maintain the integrity of the register to protect the public. At the same time, it’s critical we approach any investigations about individuals objectively and transparently, avoiding any unfair discrimination,” the Council said.

The Council said Pearson VUE has reviewed all data relating to the NMC’s CBT from every test site globally, and there is no evidence of similar activity at any other site.

According to Andrea Sutcliffe, NMC Chief Executive and Registrar, “data from one test site in Nigeria is unusual and concerning. We have regulatory processes which we will now follow, and if necessary, we can refuse registration or remove people from our register, to protect the public and people who use health and care services.

“We know the public and people who use services may find this worrying. This affects just over 500 out of the 771,445 professionals on our register. They will all have passed the practical test in this country before they were accepted onto the register and to date no concerns have been referred to us about their fitness to practice.

“We should remember that thousands of nurses and midwives who were educated overseas have safely joined our register recently and continue to provide safe, effective and kind care across the UK.”

The NMC uses a Test of Competence (ToC) to assess the skills and knowledge of people applying to join our register from overseas.

This has two main parts: a multiple-choice computer-based test known as the CBT which applicants usually sit in their home country; and a practical test known as the OSCE which people take in the UK.

The CBT is split into two parts: Part A covers numeracy, and Part B covers clinical questions for nursing or midwifery.

A company called Pearson VUE runs the CBT. They’ve been the NMC’s test provider since 2014, when we introduced the test.

A total of 1,970 candidates took their CBT at this center, of whom 512 are on the NMC register.

Pearson VUE immediately suspended tests at the Ibadan center. The NMC has since been working urgently with them to examine data and evidence about this. The NMC is also scrutinizing the full applications of those who have joined the register.

The NMC said it is writing to some applicants and professionals on their register to set out what’s happened and what it means for them. The NMC is also opening some cases to determine whether individuals gained fraudulent or incorrect entry to the register.

Sutcliffe said the NMC is giving the nurses involved the option to retake the test “and our test provider is covering the candidate exam fee costs.

“The NMC can’t make people resit – it will be their decision. If somebody does retake and passes, it won’t guarantee that they’ll gain entry to the register or be able to stay on it, but it will form part of the information the NMC will use to make a final decision.

“The NMC will consider the need for interim orders on an evidenced basis as part of each case we’re opening to determine whether or not individuals gained incorrect or fraudulent entry to the register.

“We’re looking into concerns and if necessary to manage risk, we can apply to panels to restrict individuals’ practice.”

The NMC confirmed that at this stage, “no fitness to practice concerns have been raised about anyone on the register in this group. But clearly, if someone has gained entry to the register incorrectly or fraudulently then the NMC will need to take action.

She said the NMC is approaching investigations about individuals objectively and transparently, avoiding any unfair discrimination.

“It has not yet made any determinations about individuals. Unless the NMC decide there is sufficient evidence to seek an interim suspension order, individuals will be able to continue to work,” she added.

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Nigerian Politician, Wife Jailed in London for Illegal Kidney Plot

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Former Nigerian Senator Ike Ekweremadu and wife

The fall from grace of former Nigerian Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu is now complete after he was sentenced by a British court to nine years in prison for illegal organ trafficking plot.

The court also sentenced his wife, Beatrice, to four years six months while the medical doctor who acted as the ‘middleman’ in the whole sordid episode, Dr. Obinna Obeta received 10 years and a suspension of his medical license.

Ekweremadu, his wife and Obeta were found guilty last month by the British court for criminally conspiring to bring a 21-year-old Lagos cellphone street vendor to London to donate organs to Ekweremadu’s daughter, Sonia who needed kidney transplant to stay alive.

The London court heard how the Ekweremadus’ presented the street vendor as a cousin of Sonia’s in a bid to convince the doctors with the Royal Free Hospital in London to allow the nearly $100,000 operation to proceed.

Sonia Ekweremadu

Sonia Ekweremadu after her parent’s sentencing.




The street vendor was said to have been offered up to $10,000 to become a donor after Sonia was forced to abandon her Master’s degree in film program at Newcastle University following a kidney failure.

The prosecutor, Hugh Davies KC told the court that the Ekweremadus and Obeta had treated the man and other potential donors as “disposable assets – spare parts for reward”.

During a televised sentence hearing, Mr Justice Johnson recognised Ike Ekweremadu’s “substantial fall from grace”.

Lynette Woodrow, deputy chief crown prosecutor and national modern slavery lead at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), said it had been “our first conviction for trafficking for the purposes of organ removal in England and Wales”.

She said it highlighted an important legal principle which made it irrelevant whether the trafficking victim knew he was coming to the UK to provide a kidney.

“With all trafficking offences,” Ms Woodrow said, “the consent of the person trafficked is no defense. The law is clear; you cannot consent to your own exploitation.”

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Health

WHO Says Africa Could Face COVID-19 Catastrophe with 10 Million Severe Cases, 3.3 Million Death

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Africa faces COVID-19 catastrophe

The World Health Organization (WHO) warned this week that Africa could become the next epicenter for coronavirus (COVID-19) infections with the potential to kill over three million people on the continent.

In sounding the alarm, WHO said up to 10 African countries do not have ventilators, oxygen and masks, and that could result in major catastrophe should COVID-19 pandemic worsen on the continent.

Michael Yao, WHO’s Emergency Operations Manager for Africa, said Africa could see 10 million or more COVID-19 cases in the next six months based on their current projections, unless drastic actions are taken.

United nations Economic Commission for Africa in a report said “anywhere between 300,000 and 3.3 million African people could lose their lives as a direct result of COVID-19, depending on the intervention measures taken to stop the spread.”

The report laid out a worse case scenario with 3.3 million people facing death and 1.2 billion infections.

“Africa is particularly susceptible because 56 per cent of the urban population is concentrated in overcrowded and poorly serviced slum dwellings (excluding North Africa) and only 34 per cent of the households have access to basic hand washing facilities,” the report said.

“In all, 71 per cent of Africa’s workforce is informally employed, and most of those cannot work from home. Close to 40 per cent of children under 5 years of age in Africa are undernourished,” the report added.

Africa's Ventilator Problem

The UN report laid out a grim scenario for Africa.

“Of all the continents Africa has the highest prevalence of certain underlying conditions, like tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS.

“With lower ratios of hospital beds and health professionals to its population than other regions, high dependency on imports for its medicinal and pharmaceutical products, weak legal identity systems for direct benefit transfers, and weak economies that are unable to sustain health and lockdown costs, the continent is vulnerable.”

Even under the best case scenario, where Africa does everything right, the report said over 300,000 Africans could still perish from COVID-19.

The New York Times in a devastating report over the weekend reported that 41 African countries have less than 2,000 working ventilators.

According to The Times, “South Sudan, a nation of 11 million, has more vice presidents (five) than ventilators (four). The Central African Republic has three ventilators for its five million people.
“In Liberia, which is similar in size, there are six working machines — and one of them sits behind the gates of the United States Embassy.

“In all, fewer than 2,000 working ventilators have to serve hundreds of millions of people in public hospitals across 41 African countries…Ten countries in Africa have none at all.”

“We are now failing. Let me use that word deliberately,” epidemiologist Mahad Hassan, a member of the Somalian government’s coronavirus task force, told The Washington Post of the country’s COVID-19 response. “At our main treatment center, almost nothing is there. Last time I visited, beds, only beds.”

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