Some
Nigerians in Ghana alleged that traders were being unnecessarily stressed by
Ghanaian authorities Following the closure of her shops by Ghanaian
authorities, a Nigerian woman and mother of three children has killed herself,
the National Association of Nigerian Traders (NANTs), Ghana Chapter, reported
in Abuja on Tuesday, October 9. The association made the development known when
the leadership visited the senior special assistant to the president on foreign
affairs and diaspora, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, to seek the intervention of President
Muhammadu Buhari on the matter. The president of NANTS, Ghana, Chief
Chukwuemeka Nnaji, said Stella Ogonna Okpaleke, a Nigerian whose shops were
locked for her failure to meet strict trading conditions put by the Ghana
government took her life on September 22. Nnaji, armed with a petition to
Buhari, called for the intervention of the federal government over the alleged
maltreatment of Nigerian businessmen in Ghana.
“Regrettably
on Saturday, September 22, one of our female members, Stella Ogonna Okpaleke,
whose shop has been under lock and key by the Ghana authority killed herself.
She committed suicide based on her shop and that of her husband that were
locked; the information we gathered was that when they locked the shop she lost
hope of reopening it. “She is from Nnewi local government area in Anambra; we
actually don’t know how much she owed, but we learnt that she took loan for her
business,” he said. According to him, the harassment on the Nigerian community
and traders in Kumasi, Ghana, is so severe. “It is unfortunate that that very
woman decided to take her own life,” Nnaji said and called on Buhari to
urgently intervene to avert similar incidents in the future. He said Nigerian
traders were being unnecessarily stressed by Ghanaian authorities.
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In
her remark, Dabiri-Erewa expressed the federal government’s condolences to the
union and the family of the deceased. She appealed to members of the union to
remain calm and assured them that the president would intervene in their case
to ensure a lasting solution to the problem. “I am just going to start by
appealing to you, I know it is painful, it is emotional, it is deep but I just
urge you to remain calm. I appeal to you to remain calm and may the soul of
Stella rest in perfect peace. When she is about to be buried, let us know so
that we may send our condolence message to the family," she said. The News
Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that Nigerian traders were shut out of their
business premises in line with an eviction order of July 27. The Ghanaian
authority is demanding that traders must have one million dollars as minimum
foreign investment capital to do business in Ghana as stipulated in its
Ministry of Trade and Industry Act, 2013.
Source: Naij.com
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