Sunkanmi Ogunade, ACADA Rep in Malaysia |
The quest for foreign education is on the increase despite the huge cost of
financing such ventures. This quest has made the United Kingdom, USA, Ghana and
Benin Republic choice destinations for Nigerians who desire to school abroad.
According to a recently published research by the British Council, it was
predicted that the number of Nigerian students in the UK would have risen from
just 2,800 in 2007, to 30,000 by 2015, while it is on record that 246 billion
naira fuels the UK education sector.
But despite all the difficulties encountered in acquiring foreign education,
many Nigerians still don’t have it easy as they are faced with numerous
challenges, chief of which is racism.
Quadlife sought to know from Nigerian students schooling abroad what they
have to endure in pursuit of their education as most foreign study agencies
don’t place on their advert pages the ugly stories of racism, stomach churning
bills and tax.
Recounting his most unforgettable racism encounter, Donald Tombia, a student
in the UK, said: “I was out with my friend and we were in a bus when an elderly
white woman that I was seated beside suddenly shifted. I was baffled because
the way she did it made it look like I was smelling, a thief or suicide bomber.
I ignored her and started speaking pidgin with my friend when, to my surprise,
she sighed and asked us to speak English.
“I still ignored her and continued talking with my friend in pidgin, then
she blurted: ‘you think you blacks are smart, you come into my country to
further your education and plant yourselves in here.’ She said a lot of
humiliating stuff, to the extent of insulting my forefathers. It took the
intervention of a Ghanaian lady to pacify me.”
Referring to the high taxes that one has to pay, Tombia said he would prefer
to come back to Nigeria rather than stay back and work in the UK.
“This is because of the wealth creation opportunities as when you work in
the UK, you have the tax, health bills, accommodation bills, light, gas, transport
and all sorts of bills to pay. It gets to a point where you are just able to
afford your clothes and food.”
For Ken, the racism encounter almost cost him his life as the traffic warden
on duty didn’t care that he hadn’t yet crossed the road. “I had to go get
something and I think there was an accident on the road and there was this
warden controlling the traffic. Two white guys were in front of me and we
wanted to cross the road.
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