He was born in Nigeria, to a Nigerian father and South
African mother. He was raised by his father in Nigeria, his mother apparently
having decamped, taking her nationality with her. Life was not easy for this
father and son. minimal education, social strife and income disparity all
culminated into a young man with few chances at a decent life. His father,
wanting the best for his boy, advised him to seek his fortune elsewhere. Or,
maybe in desperation, the young man took it upon himself to hatch a plan.
In some back alley in the bad part of town, he traded with a
forger to obtain a fake passport. How his father felt about that is not known.
Now the world was open to him, and he set about finding his fortune. He set his
sights on China because of their urgent demand for English teachers.
Once there, he worked hard at teaching for the first
institution that would hire him, and every school after that. He sent most of
his salary to his now ailing father. To augment his income he opened a small
English school; soon his gates were flooded with little ones struggling with
the intricacies of English grammar.
No doubt with the specter of his homeland and his family's poverty
never far from his mind, he enrolled in university. He had been too poor to
afford much schooling when he was younger. Remembering his father's words –
that education will improve his station in life, he studied furiously. And he
didn't stop at a bachelor's degree. When our paths crossed, he was headed for
his master's.
When he first came to China, things were a lot more lax
- both in this country and in the world.
Obtaining official documents was nowhere near as rigorous as it is today, and
it was common for official papers to be rubber-stamped rather than being
closely scrutinized. Many countries did not have any counterfeit measures
imbedded in their passports and, if they did, those measures were easy to
forge. In the ten years our man lived and worked in China under a fake
passport, never once was that permission challenged.
Eventually the fear of being found out must have lessened.
This man started taking chances. He bought an apartment, and a car. With his
little English school flourishing, he rented a larger building and hired a few
teachers.
About 2 years ago, he came close to being found out. China
had tightened visa regulations for foreigners. If a person is here on a work
visa, s/he cannot own a business. The official representing the school our man
was currently teaching at, charged with keeping foreign teachers' documents
current had taken the man's passport for visa renewal. Apparently, Chinese
databases had been updated. The school learned that their foreign teacher was
illegally operating a business. The Bureau of Foreign Affairs initially refused
to renew the visa, but then compromised. Our man was placed under notice:
within 6 months, the business should be either put in someone else's name or
disbanded altogether, and an official certificate to that effect should be
produced.
Imagine how our man must have felt! Having worked under
deception for so many years, perhaps even getting comfortable with his higher
quality of life, and now to suddenly come under scrutiny! Nevertheless, he
transferred his business into someone else's name, and the whole scandal went
away. He must have again gotten complacent with his, rich, secure life in
China.
His forged passport expired. The school he worked at knew his
document was up for renewal and offered an escort to the South African
consulate in Beijing. The Man with the Plan turned the offer down, saying he
was too busy to go and would simply send it by certified carrier. What he
actually must have done was contact a forger. In a few weeks, he produced a
new, authentic looking document.
It all came to a head on Valentine's Day this year. He had
taken his fiancee to Hong Kong to shop for wedding rings. Coming back through
the checkpoint in Shenzhen, his fraudulent documents were discovered and he was
immediately taken to jail.
All of his assets were seized: car, house, business. Bank
accounts were frozen. He remained incarcerated while the police turned over
every aspect of his life. Soon the banks were calling the school where he
worked, looking for their credit card payment. I can't tell you what was
happening at the school he founded, but this much is true: people who had
associated with him couldn't believe they had engaged with a criminal.
For four months this man sat in jail. Disowned by any
institution that had ever hired him and, most likely by any other associates,
he had all that time to contemplate how everything he worked so hard for was
now all for naught. Surely he would be deported with nothing but the clothes on
his back.
That is exactly what happened. China's police were thorough
in their investigation. Since coming to China, all evidence pointed to a hard
working man, giving to the community and fulfilling any obligation he took on.
They dug further. The Nigerian police rendered their report: nothing to report.
His only crime is that he entered this country with fake credentials.
There are many questions in the wake of this scandal. Why did
he forge a South African passport when, surely by birthright he would be
entitled to one? 'Too much stress' was his reply. Why a South African passport,
not Nigerian? 'South Africans are welcome in China'.
Ten years have passed since his entry into China. He's no
longer a young man, and he's back to square one in getting started with life.
What will he do? No answer to that. But there are many answers to other aspects
of this man's presence and attitude. Now we understand his vagueness, his
standoffishness, and his refusal to
partake of any social events.
This is a true story; one that leaves me scratching my head.
Here we have a man who has never asked for a handout. Who, by all accounts has
worked hard to improve his station in life – something society universally
dictates should be every person's imperative. He was a contributing member of
society and to the economy. His only crime is that he did so with fake
credentials.
Now, this hard working man is being deported to a country
where his educational and economic chances are few, where he will have little
to no opportunity to contribute to society, where he might become a victim of
sectarian violence, where he might again be forced to seek refuge in another
country – legally or illegally. Considering the drain on resources the European
Union is enduring because of all the refugees needing asylum, doesn't it seem
illogical that such a person – who is willing to work and otherwise law-abiding
would be denied the chance to continue his efforts?
The good news is that China bears him no ill will. Before
putting him on a plane, the officer in charge of his investigation told him he
was welcome back, provided he had proper credentials. Please join me in the
hope that our Man with a Plan can get them, and continue to help improve this
world, one student at a time.
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