Niger Delta
C’River SEMA Distributes Relief Materials To Bakassi Returnees
The Cross River State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) in collaboration with the State Food Bank Commission have distributed food and non-food items to over 1,000 Bakassi returnees that were allegedly evicted from Cameroon over tax payment.
The evictees, who arrived Bakassi on July 6, 2017 from Cameroon, were alleging that the Cameroonian authorities introduced a new tax regime of an equivalent of N55, 000 per annum for every adult, ordering those who cannot pay to leave their country.
Distributing relief materials to the victims at the Bakassi Council Secretariat, Director General of SEMA, Mr. John Inaku said that the relief materials were provided by Governor Ben Ayade with a view to ameliorating the plight of the victims.
Inaku said that SEMA was displaying the passion the governor had for his people, adding that the people were suffering as a result of the eviction.
“Governor Ayade in his magnanimity has provided the affected victims with all these items. He has sent us here to deliver these items and to also urge them to be law abiding while other better options are being taken,” he explained.
Continuing, he said, “we are also here to take care of our brothers who came back from Cameroon. They were chased out from Cameroon for obvious reasons; some of them say taxes and all of that. The returnees are from six states of Cross River, Bayelsa, Akwa-Ibom, Rivers, Ebonyi and Delta states. We are here to share these foods and non-food items to them,” he said.
Our Correspondent reports that the victims were given bags of rice, beans, indomie noodles, garri, groundnut and palm oil, beverages, blankets, cooking utensils, mosquitoe nets, among others.
Managing Director, Cross River Food Bank Commission Dr. Mercy Akpama, said that the role of Food Bank in the State was to provide food for all Cross Riverians.
“When Ayade heard that Nigerians were pushed out of Cameroon, he had to send us here with these food items to deliver to them. “These food items are for all the States represented here. Since the victims are all Nigerians, the governor had provided these food and non-food items for all of them,” she said.
The Vice-Consul of Cameroon Consulate in Nigeria, Mr. Godlove Tala, had told newsmen that the tax regime does not apply to Bakassi indigenes alone; rather, it applies to all residents of Cameroon.
Friday Nwagbara, Calabar