Nigerians begin to feel Buhari's PINCH: Parents of overseas students weep in banks |
At last Nigerians have started to feel General Muhammadu Buhari's wicked pinch of misgovernance.
Punch reports that the as dollar scarcity worsens in Nigeria, parents
who have children studying overseas have taken their frustrations to
banks, with some of them weeping openly.
Investigations by Punch correspondents revealed that the frustrations by
some parents who cannot access forex to send to their children abroad
have brought out their emotional sides, while affected students have
been crying out for help in foreign lands.
When one of our correspondents visited some banks along Muritala
Muhammed Way, Unity Road and Taiwo Road in Ilorin, the Kwara State
capital, on Wednesday and Thursday, some bank customers, who were there
to buy dollars, expressed disappointments at the scarcity of the
currency.
One of the customers, Alhaja Salamatu Ajibola, who practically broke
down in tears, lamented that the education of her two children schooling
in the United States had been threatened by the development.
She added that her children had been going without food due to her inability to send them money for their upkeep.
Ajibola said that it had been difficult for her to send her children
dollars for their personal and educational needs. She said she had
visited one of the banks several times, hoping to send dollars to her
children, only to be told that the currency was insufficient to meet
customers’ demands.
Another tearful parent, who spoke to Saturday PUNCH on the condition of
anonymity, in a first generation bank in Bauchi State, said it had
become impossible for him to meet the financial needs of his children
schooling abroad.
She said she was seeking other ways of sending money abroad due to the
difficulty she was facing in getting dollars to send to her children.
“Our children abroad are crying and we parents are also crying,” she said.
“They are confused and we are also confused because we can’t send money
to them and they can’t receive. They are in misery, hunger and
depression.
“They can’t even feed well because they can’t get money for their upkeep.”
She, therefore, called on the government to “create an escape route so that children will not continue to suffer.”
Also, Mr. Jimoh Abdulganiyu, whose son is studying medicine in Ukraine,
said he could not get dollars, even at the black market, to send to him.
Abdulganiyu said his son was given a warning letter by the school
authorities over delay in payment of accommodation fees and he risks
being asked to vacate the dormitory soon.
He expressed fears of the possibility of buying fake dollars because of
the pressure of getting dollars, which has been pushing parents to the
parallel market.
He said, “Sometimes, I would get to the bank by 6.40am, before the
official opening hour, to stand a good chance of getting dollars through
the Western Union or Money Gram.
“And this does not mean that I would automatically get the dollars, I
still have to lobby before I could get it. Even at that, there is a
limit to the amount I can get.”
One of our correspondents, who visited two commercial banks in the Sabo,
Yaba area of Lagos on Thursday, observed that there were no dollars for
sale. Sabo is a black market hub for forex activities in Lagos.
There, a 65-year-old man, Mr. Obafemi Solomon, who also expressed
frustration with the situation, struggled to fight back tears as he
narrated his ordeal.
Solomon said he was indebted to some of his friends in the United States, where his daughter was schooling.
Solomon said his friends had had to bail him out of the financial
problem because he felt it was unwise to exchange naira for dollars at
the present exchange rate.
He said, “What I am doing right now is to beg my friends who are in the
US to help me pay for my daughter’s tuition. It does not make any sense
to change naira for dollars and send to her. There is even no dollar to
buy.”
A pensioner, Mr. Olu Ajibade, who resides in Ekiti, also shared his
plight, saying things had not been this tough in the past four years
that his son had been in Middlesex University, London.
Calling for the liberalisation of the foreign exchange market, Ajibade
said, “Now we rely on the black market and the forex rate is very high.
If you don’t go to them then you are left to face the bank and they have
so many rules you have to oblige to before you can get money from them.
“You will have to fill so many forms, get a letter from the school and
go through so many rigorous processes. With that, it is not even
guaranteed that you would get money from them. Honestly, it is not easy
at all. Unfortunately, there are no other alternatives. The black market
that could have been an alternative is not properly funded. The truth
is that if you want to buy £3,000 in the black market, they tell you
that they don’t have more than £800. For instance, we needed to pay
school fees of about £10,000 but all we could do was pay half because of
the scarcity of foreign currency.”
A Nigerian student studying in a US university, Adebayo Kabiru, told
Saturday PUNCH that he would have gone bankrupt if not for the menial
jobs he was doing.
In a telephone interview with one of our correspondents, Kabiru said,
“My parents have not been able to send me money since January. At a
point, I got frustrated, but I had to do something. So now, I do some
menial jobs to pay for my upkeep.”
Also, a student studying in Russia, who spoke with Saturday PUNCH, said
she was about to be deported because her visa had expired and her
parents could not send her money to renew it.
She said, “My father has been trying to send me money for the past two
weeks for me to settle my visa problem and other things, but has been
unable to do so. I am about to be deported and when that happens, I will
lose the opportunity of rounding off my last session here in Russia.”
Simon Uwem, a student studying for his Master’s degree at a university
in Indiana, US, revealed that Nigerian students abroad have been having
rough times.
He said, “I have been able to survive because I have a research position
in school and I get paid very well. I was hired by the school for the
job. The truth is that if you are intelligent, you will survive.
“But it has been so tough for some students here. Asking your parents
for $1,000 means they need to look for N400,000. Some students don’t
even get to hear from their parents any longer. They have resorted to
doing menial jobs or marrying Akata (American citizens) here.
“A professor recently spoke to me about getting more foreign students
from Africa and I told him that finance had become a challenge even if
such students get scholarships. A textbook here costs up to $200. It has
been quite tough.”
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