Ibrahim Khaleel Bello: NIDCOM Demands Justice For Student Killed In Cyprus, Urges Students To Avoid Universities In The Country
Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM) has demanded justice for the death of a 25-year-old student in Northern Cyprus, Ibrahim Khaleel Bello, and others killed in mysterious circumstances in the country.
Khaleel was found dead in front of a seven-storey building in Kyrenia, Cyprus in 2019. Autopsy report according to police report showed that the cause of death was due to falling from a high height.
Abike Dabiri-Erewa, chairman of NIDCOM, made this known when she received a delegation led by Amina Bello, a judge and mother of Khaleel on Monday.
She said the death of Khaleel, a third-year engineering student, is one out of the incessant killings involving Nigerian students in the country.
The NIDCOM boss, who reeled out 15 names of Nigerians from a list of more than 100 killed in the country, noted that it is difficult to employ international diplomacy in investigating the cases as the country is only recognised by Turkey.
She expressed;
The death of Ibrahim Khaleel should be the tipping point to a stop in the killing of our children anywhere in the world, particularly Northern Cyprus.
It is not only Ibrahim. Kennedy Dede 28, Augustine Ngok, Gabriel Sorewei, Osabanjo Owoyale, Augustine Wallace, Stanley Eteno, Hassan Babatunde, Temitayo Adigun, and Kubat Abraham are just a few of the ones that we even know.
Dabiri-Erewa added;
The problem is that most Nigerian parents do not know that Northern Cyprus is not recognised by any country in the world. It is not a UN-recognised country. It is only recognised by Turkey.
That is why we have not been able to do much. Who do you report to? Thousands of Nigerian students are schooling there and I tell you that hundreds have been killed. Who do you take these cases to?
And they are killed in similar circumstances. The school just tells you ‘well, they committed suicide’ and nothing happens.
She noted;
We are going to list all these names of Nigerians that have been killed and we demand justice. There has been no prosecution and no compensation. No Nigerian parent should send their children to any university in Northern Cyprus – there is a collaboration which we do not understand that makes them kill blacks, particularly our Nigerian students.
Dabiri-Erewa assured the mother of the deceased student that the commission would work with her to demand justice, not only for her son but also for other Nigerians who have been killed while studying in that country.
She added that the case had already been transferred to INTERPOL through the office of the attorney general of the federation.
The chairman revealed;
We have written the NUC. The key thing is to blacklist Northern Cyprus and to stop our children from going to that country to study.
We will be working with the NUC to list all the universities in Northern Cyprus and blacklist them. We cannot be letting them kill our children.
She added there were plans by NIDCOM to visit Northern Cyprus after the COVID-19 pandemic “to see things as clearly as they were”.