…also published
in Daily Trust
“I am Hajia Ramatu Damba, wife of the Ambassador of Ghana
to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. This message is in response to your article
concerning the maintenance of mosques in Saudi Arabia. I read the article and
feel I should contact you for more details because it happened that I travelled
from Riyadh to Makkah and I saw so much filth in some of the mosques that I
prayed in. So I ask you to direct me to the appropriate authorities to see if I
could arrange for them to get some workers from Ghana for the cleaning of the
bathrooms and the mosques. Both male and female.”
This largely self-explanatory
note was a response to an article written by one Dr. Ali Al-Ghamdi; a Saudi
columnist with a leading Jeddah-based Saudi Gazette newspaper who had written
an article lamenting the poor sanitary condition of public toilets attached to
mosques along highways across his country, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. He quoted
the ambassador’s wife in a follow-up article titled “A suggestion from Ghana”
(Saudi Gazette, Wednesday, July 18, 2018).
When I read this
response my first impression wasn’t admittedly positive having found it quite
odd for an ambassador’s wife to offer facilitating services for the citizens of
her country to be employed in her host country as toilet cleaners. I had regarded
her offer as an unwarranted concession undermining not only her diplomatic prestige,
but also the dignity of her country and pride of her countrymen and women.
Looking at it
that way, I was certainly under the influence of the typical black man’s
instinctive emotional allergy to any seemingly racist insinuation against him. This
is, after all, knowing that a black man doing menial jobs in a white man’s land
is particularly vulnerable to racially-motivated contempt and even abuse.
But then I
began to look at it logically away from such emotions and I was in fact consequently
able to realize the need for many developing countries especially in
sub-Saharan Africa to leverage their respective diplomatic relations to bring real
and relatively easily achievable economic benefits to their respective citizens,
instead of wasting time and resources pursuing an apparently unrealizable foreign direct investment (FDI), which even
when it materializes, it comes at disproportionate costs and in most cases without
corresponding employment opportunities for the citizens.
Convinced of
the viability of this idea, I believe, with its extensive network of diplomatic
relations and massive human resources, Nigeria is particularly advantaged to
adopt it and explore means to leverage its diplomatic relations to facilitate
organized and regulated supply of skilled and unskilled manpower from Nigeria
to countries in Europe, Middles East and even as far as Australia, New Zealand,
Canada and the United States.
Obviously, the
short, medium and long-term micro and macroeconomic advantage of this
arrangement can’t be overemphasized. Because even without government
involvement as currently obtains, the regular remittance by foreign-based
Nigerian workers to their respective families and relatives in Nigeria amount
each year to more than two-third of the country’s total annual budget. For
instance, according to the World Bank, Nigerians working abroad remitted home
$22 billion in 2017. By the way, inasmuch as the World Bank’s estimation is
obviously based on the records of remittance transacted through official fund
transfer channels, one can imagine the amount when the funds sent through
informal channels are also considered.
Though many Nigerians
especially those with limited or no foreign exposure may nonetheless cling to
their largely empty pride-inspired delusion to dismiss this idea, yet the
reality doesn’t only justify it, but it in fact warrants its adoption. Besides,
there are already millions of Nigerian menial and other blue-collar workers scattered
across the world many of them stuck in grossly exploitative working conditions
and enduring all sorts of humiliation, which is partly due to the absence of
government involvement in their recruitment processes and working conditions. Many
others also are engaged out there in illegal hustles and activities, while many
more are still being lured into embarking on extremely dangerous illegal
immigration journeys across desert and the Mediterranean Sea where they end up
enslaved before and after managing to reach their destinations or lose their
lives on the way.
Therefore, government
involvement to facilitate strictly regularized supply of skilled and unskilled
Nigerian manpower to foreign employers abroad would not only protect Nigerian
workers out there from exploitation but would also increase their job market
value to enable them to earn renumeration befitting the qualifications of the
skilled among them and the capabilities of the unskilled ones. There is nothing
shameful in that. After all, many equally developing countries many of which
are even economically richer than Nigeria have been able achieve and maintain
their respective increasingly growing economies thanks to the regular
remittance of their respective citizens working in different countries around
the world.
Now, it’s high
time concerned government ministries and agencies in Nigeria e.g. Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and Ministry of Labour & Employment began
coordination to come up with appropriate policy to leverage Nigeria’s
diplomatic relations in pursuit of this strategy. This coordination should also
include reputable foreign recruitment agencies in Nigeria to the exclusion of the
unscrupulous ones, which connive with their foreign accomplices to defraud
unsuspecting Nigerian foreign job applicants and/or abandon them to the mercy
of exploitative employers in abroad.
The Ministry of
Labour & Employment should keep a Labour Attaché(s) in major Nigerian
embassies, high commissions and consulates abroad to maintain close
coordination with relevant authorities, recruitment agencies and prospective
employers in their respective host countries. This would prove more profitable economically
for Nigeria than maintaining most of its embassies abroad, which instead of attracting
foreign investment to Nigeria from their respective host countries as they are supposed
to do among other things, have ended up being a burden on the federal
government that effectively wastes massive resources to maintain them without
appropriate returns.
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