Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by bayulll011(m): 2:59pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
SaintNemesis: You call it stealing? Then, I am hoping and praying to be stolen too by Canada. The sooner, the happier....I will be lol i tell you,the better |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Hadampson(m): 3:02pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
minasota: NO DOWN PAYMENT.That's how we roll |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by salford: 3:02pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
when a few German ipobians were beating the former deputy senate president, some Nigerians were abusing them for insulting the corrupt politician, who happens to be member of the Nigerian elites. This same man has houses all over the US. Ipob would never have existed if Nigeria was good. Same as the wave of economic migrants moving to Australia and Canada. Nigeria pushed them out due to bad economic policies and corrupt politicians. 5 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by 12inchess: 3:03pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
salford:
Lots of Canadians are outside the country tooo. There are approximately 780,000 canadians living and working in the US and a lot of Nigerians also move to the US after obtaining Canadian citizenship. 80,000 Canadians live and work in the UK too. Approximately, 2.8million Canadians live and work abroad. Yeah. I understand all that. I actually live very in the U. S and we have several Canadian staff. My point is that not only Nigerians are immigrating. Even westerners esp America s immigrate and nobody should paint it otherwise esp trump. 5 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by bayulll011(m): 3:04pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
madridsta007:
Yes, Canada is not just taking our young people, they are taking the fattest of our crops, the best, the brightest, and the brainiest!
Not just Canada, but the US, Germany, Ireland, the UK, Australia, etc. The colonialists think ahead of the black man, their subjects. When Obama, Clinton and the UK were helping to topple GEJ in a bloodless regime change in the connivial of Nigerians from the North and South West, you think they hadn't seen this brain drain coming? Germany and Ireland, I am told from very reliable sources, were complaining that the IT industry, which had many Nigerians, had seen Nigerians relocate back to Nigeria leaving their families in Germany and Ireland because of the economic policies of the previous government. The NHS was loosing Drs from Nigeria.
Don't blame the colonialists. This is a capitalist dog-eat-dog system. Blame the Nigerians that helped topple the last government and brought in an inept and clueless and lifeless regime. oh God here we go again. which government,that almost ruin the nations with serious lootings and massive corruptions. see that one in abuja is unresponsive and slow and pathetic in decision making but will rate him far better than the ineffectual buffoon. if you know what those guys and his vroonics did to our financial sectors it will take 2 decades before we recover,you know nothing seriously 1 Like |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by salford: 3:05pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
12inchess:
Yeah. I understand all that. I actually live very close to Canada in the U. S. My point is that not only Nigerians are immigrating. Even westerners immigrate and nobody should paint it otherwise. yes. you are correct. migration is not really specific to a particular group of people. 4 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by bayulll011(m): 3:05pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
seunmohmoh: Canada will steal me soon.
Op, as if you no go go if Canada wan steal you. don't mind him,as far as am concern,more will still move and they are moving daily 1 Like |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by seunmohmoh(f): 3:10pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
bayulll011:
don't mind him,as far as am concern,more will still move and they are moving daily Before this time next year, I dey go that Canada. 2 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by sahm4u2nv(m): 3:10pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
3 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by bayulll011(m): 3:15pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
seunmohmoh: Before this time next year, I dey go that Canada. correct the earlier the better. the country can kill someone dreams and your unborn kids will always be grateful for that decision,if they don't just send them to grandma in the village cos their brain will reset back to factory mode cos i know in next 10 year nothing will improve in Nigeria 4 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Beautyaddy: 3:16pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
salford: when a few German ipobians were beating the former deputy senate president, some Nigerians were abusing them for insulting the corrupt politician, who happens to be member of the Nigerian elites. This same man has houses all over the US. Ipob would never have existed if Nigeria was good. Same as the wave of economic migrants moving to Australia and Canada. Nigeria pushed them out due to bad economic policies and corrupt politicians. Are you minding those very confused hypocrites? I saw the video and I supported that beating on him 100% In fact, that should become the norms now with all those very corrupt politicians we have in Nigeria. We all know that such opportunity to have direct assess to most of those corrupt Nigeria politicians cannot be easy in Nigeria because most of them travel around with heavy security guards who are ready to kill any civilian they feel is invading their bosses space. So yes, let it be a norm that any Nigerian politician( mostly the corrupt ones and they are many) should be disgraced with beatings and humiliation when they visit any Country abroad. 3 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by seunmohmoh(f): 3:18pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
bayulll011:
correct the earlier the better. the country can kill someone dreams and your unborn kids will always be grateful for that decision,if they don't just send them to grandma in the village cos their brain will reset back to factory mode cos i know in next 10 year nothing will improve in Nigeria Planning on traveling? 3 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by bayulll011(m): 3:23pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
seunmohmoh: Planning on traveling? Lagbara olorun.nothing will stop it lol. reply my Dm pls |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by litaninja(m): 3:24pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
Canada is not stealing the youth, Nigeria is pushing them away! 3 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by alexsoftwork(m): 3:35pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
majamajic: the young girl that won Nigeria gold medal at last all African games
The athletic federation promised them 1m for gold medal , at the end they received 100k , she was not happy then ,
but somehow she got a call from Canada , she is now in Canada studying on scholarship and still doing track and field , she is in Morocco now representing Nigeria in on going all African games , I think it will be her last for us before she switch ,
too bad !!! She is a fool for even representing Nigeria the second time. 2 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by madridsta007(m): 3:37pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
bayulll011:
oh God here we go again. which government,that almost ruin the nations with serious lootings and massive corruptions. see that one in abuja is unresponsive and slow and pathetic in decision making but will rate him far better than the ineffectual buffoon. if you know what those guys and his vroonics did to our financial sectors it will take 2 decades before we recover,you know nothing seriously lol. You speak from the place of repeated propaganda. And everyone here understands how that works. The facts and present realities say something different. Research shows that migration is largely driven by economic reasons. There are other factors- from war to crop failure to disease outbreak. But these factors are variable; economic reasons has been the constant of them all. If the economic situation in Nigeria, regardless of who is in charge, is at the same level of the previous government or better, brain drain would not spike this high. If it is worse, as it is currently is, the middle class will move. It is this simple. Look at the current crop of Ministers, persons who are supposed to be policymakers. How many technocrats are there, let alone, world-class technocrats? You have politicians in charge of Ministries. In a 3rd world country. Really? Hahaha! I laugh. Nigeria is a funny country. Citizens like you make it funny. A third world country never make any appreciable gains if run by politicians. Never, ever, ever. To believe otherwise is to be, frankly, deluded. We can pretend and propagandise everything. But the statistics show that doctors, pilots, scientists, etc are fleeing Nigeria. Again, we can pretend and decieve ourselves, but facts are facts. 2 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Nobody: 3:46pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
It's a pure case of brain drain due to Africans inept leaders. 1 Like |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by bayulll011(m): 3:47pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
madridsta007:
lol. You speak from the place of repeated propaganda. And everyone understands how that works.
The facts and present realities say something different. Research shows that migration is largely driven by economic reasons. There are other factors- from war to crop failure to disease outbreak. But these factors are variable; economic reasons has been the constant of them all.
If the economic situation in Nigeria, regardless of who is in charge, is at the same level of the previous government or better, brain drain would not spike this high. If it is worse, as it is currently is, the middle class will move. It is this simple. Look at the current crop of Ministers, persons who are policymakers. How many technocrats are there, let alone, world-class technocrats? You have politicians in charge of Ministries. In a 3rd world country. Really? Hahaha! I laugh. Nigeria is a funny country. Citizens like you make it funny.
We can pretend and propagandise everything. But the statistics show that doctors, pilots, scientists, etc are fleeing Nigeria. Again, we can pretend and deceive ourselves, but facts is facts. sincerely you are deluded. i know that one in abuja is not suppose to be the president in this country but will rate him far better than the drunken masters. me i don't support any politician of what important is that to me if it doesn't add any value to my life. those politician are the same how many elections have we had now,has anything change,that will tell you that they are both irresponsible and cannot add value to you,stop glorifying them |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Adex097: 3:49pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
2 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Mizwisdom(f): 3:54pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
I don't see any problem with this because Canada has scanty population and we are overpopulated, let them go. why do you people always raise issue on this? follow them and let us be in peace 3 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by majamajic(m): 4:00pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
alexsoftwork:
She is a fool for even representing Nigeria the second time. she just went there about 7 months ago , she is still using Naija passport , and too they wan see her progress again this time , but she is doing very well at her Canada school university games . 1 Like |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by MisDzoi: 4:00pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
My mother says when a man does not place value on his clothes another turns it to a rain. I myself have witnessed the brain drain when i wrote my IELTS and come to think that only the best in the society are seated next to you in the exam hall is crazy...you see people from all works of life...i even heard Desmond Elliot wrote the exams. This mass migration started under Buhari regime. Imagine able bodied men and women leaving this country by land and air. This is not because of what they are promised but because the have a better chance there, good health care and education too. Mind you this system has a lof of Indians, Chinese and Americans migrating to Canada...bros see don't envy them...join the train if you can. Canada fits the Nigerian Youth who don't want his talent to waste.... Just go through the people the want...from medical doctor, nurses, lawyers, sociologist, people with social works degree, meat cutters(butchers), engineers, technicians to even bakers...as long as you have a certificate to show for it...as for me and my family our relocation to Canada is as sure as eating our morning meals... Thank you Omooba77: Yes, Canada is not just taking our young people, they are taking the fattest of our crops, the best, the brightest, and the brainiest!
One of them is my friend, Olufemi, (not real name). He graduated top of his class and best in the entire university! Nine years after graduation, he got married to his equally cerebral lawyer wife, and they both had fairly paying jobs that admitted them into the struggling middle class in Nigeria. A year after marriage, Olufemi, disillusioned by the state of his family’s finances, the situation in the country and the underutilisation of his skills, and intellect at his place of work, sold all his assets and relocated his young family to Canada!
Femi’s story is not unique, almost every young Nigerian professional who is not in the process of immigrating to Canada, knows a friend, family or colleague who has relocated or is in the process of relocating. The situation is alarming, almost like the biblical “rapture”: you come to work one day, you see your colleagues, you resume the next day, and they are gone!
I recently had a conversation with a millennial working in one of the big four audit firms; the conversation bordered on the number of young professionals leaving the country for Canada. He informed me that their firm had started a WhatsApp group for ex-staff members that had immigrated to Canada; as of the time of having that discussion about 70 Nigerian immigrants had joined the group. A similar conversation with another tax consultant also working in one of the “big four” revealed the same trend. According to him, almost all his colleagues in their audit department had immigrated to Canada or some part of Europe!
Why Canada, you may ask? Well, Canada has an immigration process carefully designed to attract highly skilled young professionals. It requires you to be of a certain age bracket (the younger you are, the more points you gain) to take a “Test of English”, send your academic transcripts, have certain amount in your bank account and Voila! you get a Canadian Permanent Residence.
The process, while seamless, is expensive for the average Nigerian, and is also a clear indication of the class of people they want: comfortable, highly educated, extremely skilled, young professionals, hence the people who go through this process are not poor by Nigerian standard.
As a young professional in this country, you begin to wonder if there is something wrong with you if you have not commenced your own immigration process. When you see your friends and colleagues resign from their jobs, sell their property, and leave the country; when you watch them upload pictures of their new countries of residence on social media and ‘brag’ about how the system works; when they inform you gleefully of how they have “secured” the future of their children, and invite you to join them, you wonder if, perhaps, you are not missing out on life opportunities for your own children!
Sir, the young people leaving the country are not unpatriotic, the reality is that Nigeria has not been kind to her youths! Furthermore, this brain drain did not start with young people nor did it start in this generation. When political and religious leaders send their children outside the country to be educated or when they seek heath care outside the shores of their country, they send a clear and uncontroverted message to our young people that they do not believe in the future of their country! Young people are therefore simply taking a cue from her leaders, yet, this mass immigration in recent times is nothing like what happened in the past: it is massive, and it is alarming! Young bright people immigrating to a foreign land is the most telling evidence of a failed leadership!
What state of affairs of a country would make its young people leave e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.ng: family, friends, some measure of certainty and in some cases extremely good jobs for a foreign country, full of uncertainties and oftentimes for less than inspiring jobs?
The current state! The reality is that the state of affairs of this country is extremely discouraging for young people! Our country is ridden with nepotism, insecurity, poor infrastructure, unemployment and a lot more, underemployment! What is more discouraging, and frightening is that nothing in the present seems to indicate that things will get better in the future!
Our health care system needs a complete overhaul, medical “facilities” are in dire state of disrepair. The doctor to patient ratio in public hospitals is shockingly poor, yet our doctors and health personnel continue to emigrate the country, because they are overworked, overwhelmed and underpaid!
A close friend and her younger sister were recently threatened with deportation, as she had remained in the United Kingdom, after her student visa expired. Her British friends started a petition online in a bid to keep her and her sister in the UK. There is a back story to all of this drama: my friend had lost two of her siblings who had medical conditions, mainly as a result of the poor health care system in the country and has a younger sister with the same medical condition who may have faced a similar fate, were it not for the excellent and timely treatment she had received in the UK. Unfortunately, her younger sister requires continuous health care which is simply not available in our country.
My friend, a brilliant lawyer and patriotic Nigeria, is compelled to appeal to the British Government to offer a right to remain, because her younger sister’s life quite literally depends on it!
Why do we subject our young people to this kind of humiliation? Why do we have to beg to remain in a foreign land? How does a developing nation recover from such massive evacuation of its human capital? And more importantly, how do we address this issue to reignite a sense of patriotism amongst our young people?
Quite frankly, I do not have the answers to all these questions.
I hear that there is a common joke in Toronto, that the best place to have a heart attack is in a taxi, because the driver is probably an immigrant doctor. The young people leaving are some of the smartest and the brightest, they know that adapting to a new society is hard, yet they still go! Many of them are skilled professionals, lawyers, doctors, architects, pharmacists, they know that they must write and pass expensive professional exams, yet, they still go! They hear about racism, about the cold, the lonely nights and outright discrimination, yet, they still go! The frustration and disappointment amongst young people are real and palpable, but, they believe the country has little to offer so they leave.
We must address this issue with the urgency it deserves, because at the end of the day, Nigeria is the only country we can truly call home! It is for this reason that many Nigerians in the Diaspora still choose to come back home! They still build property, start businesses and make investments in the country. They still give their children African names and follow the local news closely; many are even more abreast and passionate about the happenings in the country than those of us in the country. They are never truly gone; one “leg” in, the other out! and how can they, their parents, friends, colleagues and relatives are still here!
Yes, Canada is not just taking our young people, they are taking the fattest of our crops, the best, the brightest, and the brainiest!
One of them is my friend, Olufemi, (not real name). He graduated top of his class and best in the entire university! Nine years after graduation, he got married to his equally cerebral lawyer wife, and they both had fairly paying jobs that admitted them into the struggling middle class in Nigeria. A year after marriage, Olufemi, disillusioned by the state of his family’s finances, the situation in the country and the underutilisation of his skills, and intellect at his place of work, sold all his assets and relocated his young family to Canada!
Femi’s story is not unique, almost every young Nigerian professional who is not in the process of immigrating to Canada, knows a friend, family or colleague who has relocated or is in the process of relocating. The situation is alarming, almost like the biblical “rapture”: you come to work one day, you see your colleagues, you resume the next day, and they are gone!
I recently had a conversation with a millennial working in one of the big four audit firms; the conversation bordered on the number of young professionals leaving the country for Canada. He informed me that their firm had started a WhatsApp group for ex-staff members that had immigrated to Canada; as of the time of having that discussion about 70 Nigerian immigrants had joined the group. A similar conversation with another tax consultant also working in one of the “big four” revealed the same trend. According to him, almost all his colleagues in their audit department had immigrated to Canada or some part of Europe!
Why Canada, you may ask? Well, Canada has an immigration process carefully designed to attract highly skilled young professionals. It requires you to be of a certain age bracket (the younger you are, the more points you gain) to take a “Test of English”, send your academic transcripts, have certain amount in your bank account and Voila! you get a Canadian Permanent Residence.
The process, while seamless, is expensive for the average Nigerian, and is also a clear indication of the class of people they want: comfortable, highly educated, extremely skilled, young professionals, hence the people who go through this process are not poor by Nigerian standard.
As a young professional in this country, you begin to wonder if there is something wrong with you if you have not commenced your own immigration process. When you see your friends and colleagues resign from their jobs, sell their property, and leave the country; when you watch them upload pictures of their new countries of residence on social media and ‘brag’ about how the system works; when they inform you gleefully of how they have “secured” the future of their children, and invite you to join them, you wonder if, perhaps, you are not missing out on life opportunities for your own children!
Sir, the young people leaving the country are not unpatriotic, the reality is that Nigeria has not been kind to her youths! Furthermore, this brain drain did not start with young people nor did it start in this generation. When political and religious leaders send their children outside the country to be educated or when they seek heath care outside the shores of their country, they send a clear and uncontroverted message to our young people that they do not believe in the future of their country! Young people are therefore simply taking a cue from her leaders, yet, this mass immigration in recent times is nothing like what happened in the past: it is massive, and it is alarming! Young bright people immigrating to a foreign land is the most telling evidence of a failed leadership!
What state of affairs of a country would make its young people leave e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.ng: family, friends, some measure of certainty and in some cases extremely good jobs for a foreign country, full of uncertainties and oftentimes for less than inspiring jobs?
The current state! The reality is that the state of affairs of this country is extremely discouraging for young people! Our country is ridden with nepotism, insecurity, poor infrastructure, unemployment and a lot more, underemployment! What is more discouraging, and frightening is that nothing in the present seems to indicate that things will get better in the future!
Our health care system needs a complete overhaul, medical “facilities” are in dire state of disrepair. The doctor to patient ratio in public hospitals is shockingly poor, yet our doctors and health personnel continue to emigrate the country, because they are overworked, overwhelmed and underpaid!
A close friend and her younger sister were recently threatened with deportation, as she had remained in the United Kingdom, after her student visa expired. Her British friends started a petition online in a bid to keep her and her sister in the UK. There is a back story to all of this drama: my friend had lost two of her siblings who had medical conditions, mainly as a result of the poor health care system in the country and has a younger sister with the same medical condition who may have faced a similar fate, were it not for the excellent and timely treatment she had received in the UK. Unfortunately, her younger sister requires continuous health care which is simply not available in our country.
My friend, a brilliant lawyer and patriotic Nigeria, is compelled to appeal to the British Government to offer a right to remain, because her younger sister’s life quite literally depends on it!
Why do we subject our young people to this kind of humiliation? Why do we have to beg to remain in a foreign land? How does a developing nation recover from such massive evacuation of its human capital? And more importantly, how do we address this issue to reignite a sense of patriotism amongst our young people?
Quite frankly, I do not have the answers to all these questions.
I hear that there is a common joke in Toronto, that the best place to have a heart attack is in a taxi, because the driver is probably an immigrant doctor. The young people leaving are some of the smartest and the brightest, they know that adapting to a new society is hard, yet they still go! Many of them are skilled professionals, lawyers, doctors, architects, pharmacists, they know that they must write and pass expensive professional exams, yet, they still go! They hear about racism, about the cold, the lonely nights and outright discrimination, yet, they still go! The frustration and disappointment amongst young people are real and palpable, but, they believe the country has little to offer so they leave.
We must address this issue with the urgency it deserves, because at the end of the day, Nigeria is the only country we can truly call home! It is for this reason that many Nigerians in the Diaspora still choose to come back home! They still build property, start businesses and make investments in the country. They still give their children African names and follow the local news closely; many are even more abreast and passionate about the happenings in the country than those of us in the country. They are never truly gone; one “leg” in, the other out! and how can they, their parents, friends, colleagues and relatives are still here!
Canada’s gain is Nigeria’s loss. It is impossible to stop this trend completely, sadly, but we can discourage it by creating a more enabling environment for everyone. We would need to do this gradually, perhaps, we can start with our health care, with improved power and security of lives and property!
More importantly, young people need to sense a clear redirection in the affairs of the country; when this is done, maybe, they will remain in the country. But first, we must start! The sooner we begin, the better.
https://punchng.com/canada-is-stealing-our-young-people/amp
2 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by madridsta007(m): 4:01pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
bayulll011:
sincerely you are deluded. i know that one in abuja is not suppose to be the president in this country but will rate him far better than the drunken masters. me i don't support any politician of what important is that to me if it doesn't add any value to my life. those politician are the same how many elections have we had now,has anything change,that will tell you that they are both irresponsible and cannot add value to you,stop glorifying them LOL. When propaganda doesn't work, try demonising with inane insults. Sadly, or will I say thankfully, that doesn't work again. You can read the Punch article again, as I know you never read it. And face facts, face real stories. Of course, you will continue pretending to yourself and repeating propaganda, but it is important you read it and add some knowledge to yourself. 1 Like |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Beautyaddy: 4:01pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
litaninja: Canada is not stealing the youth, Nigeria is pushing them away! Yes...that is exactly what most of the Nigerian Politicians want. They only pretend to support most of the youths in Nigeria so that they use their brains to be brainwashed for votes during elections. Once those Politicians get elected they care less where most of those youths who voted for them move to outside the Country. In fact, there was this Nigerian Politician(name I can't recall) who was being interviewed by a Channels TV reporter where they were asking him if he had any concerns about the very high numbers of Nigerians and especially the youths leaving Nigeria in thousands to other Countries. The response the Politicians gave was that the population of Nigeria keeps increasing in very high numbers from most people popping out babies they cannot afford to take care of. He states that he believes it was a very good move and he supported the idea that most Nigerians move out to other Countries so that there will be less people in Nigeria putting too much pressure on the limited available opportunities Nigeria currently has. 2 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Mizwisdom(f): 4:07pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
Cactus: I studied in the usa in early 2000s after my graduation I chose to return to Nigeria. I had a good job that I made a lot of impact and drove the company forward based on my skills. I had difficulties with one of the managers who chose not to accept change and i felt under utilized, so I quit the job. Got another good job and worked hard. Things moved nicely during Jonathan's time business opportunities however as Buhari took over, hardly could I get a business meeting done. No one was interested. Feeling frustrated I started considering leaving Nigeria again.
I was a bit mad at myself for returning to Nigeria saying had I known things will turn out this way but no one could have known. Finally I left the country for Canada as it is the easiest place to quickly move to. Am happy comfortable and those who I work with appreciate what I do and I can keep pace with advancements in my chosen profession.
Canada is not stealing the most intelligent Nigerians, the government is letting them go. I had an interview I easily was qualified for when I first returned to Nigeria, the only reason I did not get the job was I did not have a Nigerian working experience. I was born Nigeria, did secondary school in Nigeria, bsc outside, returned to Nigeria and now I dont have Nigerian working experience though true but what about the Indians and other foreigners coming in. There are many qualified Nigerians who will fill their positions.
I was once at a hotel while waiting cleaning was going on and an Indian guy who is a manager stood monitoring how the Nigerian cleaned. Do you think if the Nigerian had the opportunity to leave the country he will choose to stay? Nigeria is a very expensive country to live.
If the issue of education, security, and power generation can be addressed properly, other industries will pickup and Nigeria will head towards a positive direction.
Canada did not steal me, I chose to leave Nigeria for Canada because I do not feel the situation in Nigeria will improve anytime soon. How can a graduate who completed his/her academic studies since 2017 or longer be unemployed till now.
What are you explaining for? the OP only wrote his opinion and you don't need to justify yourself to him. Our population is far above the required number and we do need people to migrate abroad, the only problem now is that our borders are porous and more foreigners of questionable characters are flooding in, this is the reason for banditry and other crimes especially in the North. 2 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Gudiza(m): 4:08pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
flexindino: if u know and u sure u wanna be stolen by d canadian govt, please gather here.... diaris gon be a meeting by 4pm today Present! |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by sweetilicious(f): 4:16pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
Omooba77: Yes, Canada is not just taking our young people, they are taking the fattest of our crops, the best, the brightest, and the brainiest!
One of them is my friend, Olufemi, (not real name). He graduated top of his class and best in the entire university! Nine years after graduation, he got married to his equally cerebral lawyer wife, and they both had fairly paying jobs that admitted them into the struggling middle class in Nigeria. A year after marriage, Olufemi, disillusioned by the state of his family’s finances, the situation in the country and the underutilisation of his skills, and intellect at his place of work, sold all his assets and relocated his young family to Canada!
Femi’s story is not unique, almost every young Nigerian professional who is not in the process of immigrating to Canada, knows a friend, family or colleague who has relocated or is in the process of relocating. The situation is alarming, almost like the biblical “rapture”: you come to work one day, you see your colleagues, you resume the next day, and they are gone!
I recently had a conversation with a millennial working in one of the big four audit firms; the conversation bordered on the number of young professionals leaving the country for Canada. He informed me that their firm had started a WhatsApp group for ex-staff members that had immigrated to Canada; as of the time of having that discussion about 70 Nigerian immigrants had joined the group. A similar conversation with another tax consultant also working in one of the “big four” revealed the same trend. According to him, almost all his colleagues in their audit department had immigrated to Canada or some part of Europe!
Why Canada, you may ask? Well, Canada has an immigration process carefully designed to attract highly skilled young professionals. It requires you to be of a certain age bracket (the younger you are, the more points you gain) to take a “Test of English”, send your academic transcripts, have certain amount in your bank account and Voila! you get a Canadian Permanent Residence.
The process, while seamless, is expensive for the average Nigerian, and is also a clear indication of the class of people they want: comfortable, highly educated, extremely skilled, young professionals, hence the people who go through this process are not poor by Nigerian standard.
As a young professional in this country, you begin to wonder if there is something wrong with you if you have not commenced your own immigration process. When you see your friends and colleagues resign from their jobs, sell their property, and leave the country; when you watch them upload pictures of their new countries of residence on social media and ‘brag’ about how the system works; when they inform you gleefully of how they have “secured” the future of their children, and invite you to join them, you wonder if, perhaps, you are not missing out on life opportunities for your own children!
Sir, the young people leaving the country are not unpatriotic, the reality is that Nigeria has not been kind to her youths! Furthermore, this brain drain did not start with young people nor did it start in this generation. When political and religious leaders send their children outside the country to be educated or when they seek heath care outside the shores of their country, they send a clear and uncontroverted message to our young people that they do not believe in the future of their country! Young people are therefore simply taking a cue from her leaders, yet, this mass immigration in recent times is nothing like what happened in the past: it is massive, and it is alarming! Young bright people immigrating to a foreign land is the most telling evidence of a failed leadership!
What state of affairs of a country would make its young people leave e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.ng: family, friends, some measure of certainty and in some cases extremely good jobs for a foreign country, full of uncertainties and oftentimes for less than inspiring jobs?
The current state! The reality is that the state of affairs of this country is extremely discouraging for young people! Our country is ridden with nepotism, insecurity, poor infrastructure, unemployment and a lot more, underemployment! What is more discouraging, and frightening is that nothing in the present seems to indicate that things will get better in the future!
Our health care system needs a complete overhaul, medical “facilities” are in dire state of disrepair. The doctor to patient ratio in public hospitals is shockingly poor, yet our doctors and health personnel continue to emigrate the country, because they are overworked, overwhelmed and underpaid!
A close friend and her younger sister were recently threatened with deportation, as she had remained in the United Kingdom, after her student visa expired. Her British friends started a petition online in a bid to keep her and her sister in the UK. There is a back story to all of this drama: my friend had lost two of her siblings who had medical conditions, mainly as a result of the poor health care system in the country and has a younger sister with the same medical condition who may have faced a similar fate, were it not for the excellent and timely treatment she had received in the UK. Unfortunately, her younger sister requires continuous health care which is simply not available in our country.
My friend, a brilliant lawyer and patriotic Nigeria, is compelled to appeal to the British Government to offer a right to remain, because her younger sister’s life quite literally depends on it!
Why do we subject our young people to this kind of humiliation? Why do we have to beg to remain in a foreign land? How does a developing nation recover from such massive evacuation of its human capital? And more importantly, how do we address this issue to reignite a sense of patriotism amongst our young people?
Quite frankly, I do not have the answers to all these questions.
I hear that there is a common joke in Toronto, that the best place to have a heart attack is in a taxi, because the driver is probably an immigrant doctor. The young people leaving are some of the smartest and the brightest, they know that adapting to a new society is hard, yet they still go! Many of them are skilled professionals, lawyers, doctors, architects, pharmacists, they know that they must write and pass expensive professional exams, yet, they still go! They hear about racism, about the cold, the lonely nights and outright discrimination, yet, they still go! The frustration and disappointment amongst young people are real and palpable, but, they believe the country has little to offer so they leave.
We must address this issue with the urgency it deserves, because at the end of the day, Nigeria is the only country we can truly call home! It is for this reason that many Nigerians in the Diaspora still choose to come back home! They still build property, start businesses and make investments in the country. They still give their children African names and follow the local news closely; many are even more abreast and passionate about the happenings in the country than those of us in the country. They are never truly gone; one “leg” in, the other out! and how can they, their parents, friends, colleagues and relatives are still here!
Yes, Canada is not just taking our young people, they are taking the fattest of our crops, the best, the brightest, and the brainiest!
One of them is my friend, Olufemi, (not real name). He graduated top of his class and best in the entire university! Nine years after graduation, he got married to his equally cerebral lawyer wife, and they both had fairly paying jobs that admitted them into the struggling middle class in Nigeria. A year after marriage, Olufemi, disillusioned by the state of his family’s finances, the situation in the country and the underutilisation of his skills, and intellect at his place of work, sold all his assets and relocated his young family to Canada!
Femi’s story is not unique, almost every young Nigerian professional who is not in the process of immigrating to Canada, knows a friend, family or colleague who has relocated or is in the process of relocating. The situation is alarming, almost like the biblical “rapture”: you come to work one day, you see your colleagues, you resume the next day, and they are gone!
I recently had a conversation with a millennial working in one of the big four audit firms; the conversation bordered on the number of young professionals leaving the country for Canada. He informed me that their firm had started a WhatsApp group for ex-staff members that had immigrated to Canada; as of the time of having that discussion about 70 Nigerian immigrants had joined the group. A similar conversation with another tax consultant also working in one of the “big four” revealed the same trend. According to him, almost all his colleagues in their audit department had immigrated to Canada or some part of Europe!
Why Canada, you may ask? Well, Canada has an immigration process carefully designed to attract highly skilled young professionals. It requires you to be of a certain age bracket (the younger you are, the more points you gain) to take a “Test of English”, send your academic transcripts, have certain amount in your bank account and Voila! you get a Canadian Permanent Residence.
The process, while seamless, is expensive for the average Nigerian, and is also a clear indication of the class of people they want: comfortable, highly educated, extremely skilled, young professionals, hence the people who go through this process are not poor by Nigerian standard.
As a young professional in this country, you begin to wonder if there is something wrong with you if you have not commenced your own immigration process. When you see your friends and colleagues resign from their jobs, sell their property, and leave the country; when you watch them upload pictures of their new countries of residence on social media and ‘brag’ about how the system works; when they inform you gleefully of how they have “secured” the future of their children, and invite you to join them, you wonder if, perhaps, you are not missing out on life opportunities for your own children!
Sir, the young people leaving the country are not unpatriotic, the reality is that Nigeria has not been kind to her youths! Furthermore, this brain drain did not start with young people nor did it start in this generation. When political and religious leaders send their children outside the country to be educated or when they seek heath care outside the shores of their country, they send a clear and uncontroverted message to our young people that they do not believe in the future of their country! Young people are therefore simply taking a cue from her leaders, yet, this mass immigration in recent times is nothing like what happened in the past: it is massive, and it is alarming! Young bright people immigrating to a foreign land is the most telling evidence of a failed leadership!
What state of affairs of a country would make its young people leave e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.ng: family, friends, some measure of certainty and in some cases extremely good jobs for a foreign country, full of uncertainties and oftentimes for less than inspiring jobs?
The current state! The reality is that the state of affairs of this country is extremely discouraging for young people! Our country is ridden with nepotism, insecurity, poor infrastructure, unemployment and a lot more, underemployment! What is more discouraging, and frightening is that nothing in the present seems to indicate that things will get better in the future!
Our health care system needs a complete overhaul, medical “facilities” are in dire state of disrepair. The doctor to patient ratio in public hospitals is shockingly poor, yet our doctors and health personnel continue to emigrate the country, because they are overworked, overwhelmed and underpaid!
A close friend and her younger sister were recently threatened with deportation, as she had remained in the United Kingdom, after her student visa expired. Her British friends started a petition online in a bid to keep her and her sister in the UK. There is a back story to all of this drama: my friend had lost two of her siblings who had medical conditions, mainly as a result of the poor health care system in the country and has a younger sister with the same medical condition who may have faced a similar fate, were it not for the excellent and timely treatment she had received in the UK. Unfortunately, her younger sister requires continuous health care which is simply not available in our country.
My friend, a brilliant lawyer and patriotic Nigeria, is compelled to appeal to the British Government to offer a right to remain, because her younger sister’s life quite literally depends on it!
Why do we subject our young people to this kind of humiliation? Why do we have to beg to remain in a foreign land? How does a developing nation recover from such massive evacuation of its human capital? And more importantly, how do we address this issue to reignite a sense of patriotism amongst our young people?
Quite frankly, I do not have the answers to all these questions.
I hear that there is a common joke in Toronto, that the best place to have a heart attack is in a taxi, because the driver is probably an immigrant doctor. The young people leaving are some of the smartest and the brightest, they know that adapting to a new society is hard, yet they still go! Many of them are skilled professionals, lawyers, doctors, architects, pharmacists, they know that they must write and pass expensive professional exams, yet, they still go! They hear about racism, about the cold, the lonely nights and outright discrimination, yet, they still go! The frustration and disappointment amongst young people are real and palpable, but, they believe the country has little to offer so they leave.
We must address this issue with the urgency it deserves, because at the end of the day, Nigeria is the only country we can truly call home! It is for this reason that many Nigerians in the Diaspora still choose to come back home! They still build property, start businesses and make investments in the country. They still give their children African names and follow the local news closely; many are even more abreast and passionate about the happenings in the country than those of us in the country. They are never truly gone; one “leg” in, the other out! and how can they, their parents, friends, colleagues and relatives are still here!
Canada’s gain is Nigeria’s loss. It is impossible to stop this trend completely, sadly, but we can discourage it by creating a more enabling environment for everyone. We would need to do this gradually, perhaps, we can start with our health care, with improved power and security of lives and property!
More importantly, young people need to sense a clear redirection in the affairs of the country; when this is done, maybe, they will remain in the country. But first, we must start! The sooner we begin, the better.
https://punchng.com/canada-is-stealing-our-young-people/amp
Nonsense! 3 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Fhemmmy: 4:19pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
NaijaRoyalty: They are not stealing your people
Your people got tired of the likes of Buhari, Tinubu and Abba Kyari rulling them and too many unfulfilled promises of APC led government .
The unemployment rate hit an all time high since buhari took mantle of leadership , poverty and frustration escalating day by day.
Everyone is tired .
You mean the people are NOT tired of the government of GEJ and other leaders? The country is just a mess and has nothing to do with one particular leader but all the so called leaders in Nigeria . . . . Nigeria is a zoo! 4 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Nealson(m): 4:22pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
When canada steal you verily verily i say unto you being broke is out of your life....... Canada abeg come and steal me ẹ bẹ ni mo bẹ́ẹ̀ o 2 Likes |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by bayulll011(m): 4:26pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
madridsta007:
LOL.
When propaganda doesn't work, try demonising with inane insults. Sadly, or will I say thankfully, that doesn't work again.
You can read the Punch article again, as I know you never read it. And face facts, face real stories. Of course, you will continue pretending to yourself and repeating propaganda, but it is important you read it and add some knowledge to yourself.
who cares propaganda my foot,if you like worship Nigeria Politician whats my own,and before inceptions people migrate and people will continue to migrate,call it propaganda the stories of the migrations also during this regime as was the same with corruptions during the buffon era. |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by MicroBox: 4:43pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
NaijaRoyalty: They are not stealing your people
Your people got tired of the likes of Buhari, Tinubu and Abba Kyari rulling them and too many unfulfilled promises of APC led government .
The unemployment rate hit an all time high since buhari took mantle of leadership , poverty and frustration escalating day by day.
Everyone is tired .
Just say Nigeria politician and mentioning names.... What is the difference between PDP and APC. |
Re: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by Rarefayol(m): 4:49pm On Aug 21, 2019 |
Local man is tired of this country... Canada abeg Come and steal me 3 Likes |