Over 400 Nigerians who fled Ukraine return home

Nigeria's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said there were about 5,600 Nigerian students in Ukraine.

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A first batch of more than 400 Nigerians who fled Ukraine following the Russian invasion were flown home on Friday. The group, most of whom were students, arrived shortly after 0630 GMT on a chartered flight from Romania’s capital Bucharest, one of the hubs from where African governments are scrambling to extract stranded citizens.

Nigerian foreign ministry official Gabriel Aduda tweeted pictures of the group inside an aircraft late on Thursday, saying “415 Nigerians mostly students fleeing the Ukraine-Russian war from Bucharest.”

After landing in the capital Abuja, many looked tired but relieved that their ordeal was over. 

“I’m very happy to be back home, thank you, Nigeria!” one young woman said as she walked off the tarmac and into the terminal.

As they filled out government forms, many still wearing their winter clothes, one student recounted his traumatic experience.

“There were a lot of heavy artillery, missiles, bombs and all that,” said Oyewo Elisha, 22, who was studying in Kharkiv. 

“My school, everywhere… it’s really bad. We couldn’t stay there.”

Haroun Rukayat, 20, said she had to wait 14 hours in the cold before she was able to cross into Romania.

“I’m one of the lucky ones… some people are still stuck in different cities, especially in Sumy where the war is really going on,” she said.

“I am thankful that I was able to get out.”

Minister of Foreign Affairs Geoffrey Onyeama said there were about 5,600 Nigerian students in Ukraine and an estimated 8,000 Nigerian citizens in the country before the war. On Monday he said an estimated 1,000 citizens were ready for pickup from Romania, 200 others in Slovakia, and 250 both in Hungary and Poland. 

A million refugees have fled Ukraine so far, the UN said Thursday, warning that unless the onslaught ended immediately, millions more were likely to flee.

Ghana on Tuesday became the first African country to return its citizens, flying home 17 out of 500 stranded students.

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