Having earlier renounced his Nigerian citizenship, Edwin
Ijeoma, a professor of public sector economics at the University of Fort Hare,
was left in the cold after his South African citizenship was revoked by the
country’s ministry of home affairs. He is now stateless.
Mr Ijeoma, who arrived in South Africa from Nigeria on a
study permit in 1998 to study at the University of Pretoria, was found guilty
of fraudulently relying on a bigamous marriage to a South African woman to
obtain citizenship by naturalization, local media Times Live reported.
The don was granted permanent residency in the southern
African country the same year he graduated from the University of Pretoria,
after being exempted from immigration restrictions due to his marriage to a
local woman two years earlier.
By 2005, the academic, who obtained a PhD in economics in 2003, was granted South African citizenship through naturalisation, but in 2007 he divorced his South African wife, ostensibly because the couple was unable to conceive a child, according to Times.
Thereafter, the newspaper added, he was joined in South
Africa by a Nigerian woman, Anne Tomo, who, in her application for permanent
residence, attached a copy of her 1993 marriage to him in Nigeria, tipping off
home affairs officials that Mr Ijeoma had committed bigamy.
Officials said on both occasions when Mr Ijeoma made
submissions to immigration authorities in South Africa, when he was asked to
indicate an immediate family member still residing in Nigeria, he listed Anne
Ijeoma as his sister – not his wife.
Officials held that Mr Ijeoma’s sole mission in marrying the
South African woman was to acquire citizenship, and he has now had his
citizenship revoked by the ministry of home affairs.
The verdict followed a suit he filed against the home
affairs ministry before the Bhisho high court.
The court’s acting judge, Mickey Mfenyana, upheld the
initial judgment from 2020 which found Mr Ijeoma guilty of falsifying his
marital status to the department, thereby making his South African citizenship
null and void.
The judge further held that her ruling cannot be appealed,
adding that another court will not differ from her finding as Mr Ijeoma “was
disingenuous, if not dishonest, and that there was no reason to interfere with
the minister’s decision.”
Ms Mfenyana further held that Mr Ijeoma had presented
contradictory reasons for his bigamous actions.
“That as an African man, he believed he was entitled to
marry more than one wife; and that he represented himself as single because he
was not aware that South Africa recognised customary marriages,” Times quoted
Ms Mfenyana as saying.
The judge noted that Mr Ijeoma concealed his marriage in
Nigeria from officials on three occasions: when he applied for permanent
residence in South Africa, when he got married in the country and when he
applied for citizenship.
That, the judge held, was highly improbable for an academic,
“who by his own admission is of good and sound mind and an intellectual giant,”
to have remained “ignorant of the implications of not disclosing his Nigerian
marriage” throughout his stay in the country and his encounters with
immigration matters.
In defence, Mr Ijeoma told the court he obtained a permanent
residence permit because of his “good and sound character” rather than his
marriage to the South African woman.
He argued that the human affairs ministry failed to consider
his intellectual contribution to the country as a result of his research as an
academic, and his role at the Africa Union’s New Partnership for Africa’s
Development (NEPAD), where, according to his LinkedIn profile, he is a pioneer
research specialist.
Ms Mfenyana rebuffed this saying it was stated in the
exemption certificate he got that marriage was the basis for his exemption. She
also recalled that in 2015, Mr Ijeoma pleaded to home affairs to have
compassion on him, that he obtained citizenship by naturalisation as a result
of the marriage.
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