THE AMBASSADOR
by BOB EJIKE
The Italian Embassy in Lagos is situated with
other Western embassies in the serene and affluent Victoria Island, among plush
colonial mansions with shimmering swimming pools, Alsatian dogs and armed
police guards, in a circular undisputedly elitist street with a disputed name,
lined with well-groomed trees of various shapes with drooping leafy branches.
The shrubbery was livid with chirping insects and colorful birds that
occasionally stormed and exploded rigorously in unison forming a temporary
twittering orchestra above the ecstatic belching and moaning of the wind. The
embassy road was originally called Eleke Crescent, but the brutal Nigerian
military dictator General Sani Abacha, in a bid to show the U.S government
which constantly opposed his cruel despotism that every part of the country,
including their embassy, was under his firm control, changed the name of the
street to Louis Farrakhan Crescent, in honor of the powerful Afro-American
head of the Nation of Islam, a staunch supporter of the dictator and other
third world dictatorships that are inimical to the U.S and as such is perceived
by the American authorities as a very dangerous man.
The Italian embassy structure in Lagos stands
face-to-face with its Russian counterpart, dwarfed from within the compound by
the adjacent white palatial one-storey Ambassador’s Residence. Between the two
buildings are a number of small bungalows reserved for the Italian police
orderlies and the ambassador’s personal staff of chauffeurs, stewards, cooks
and butlers. The compound is large enough to host an informal football match,
beautified externally by carefully tended lawns, exotic tropical trees and
greenery in which monkeys and ostriches played. In spite of its plush
surroundings, Louis Farrakhan Crescent was in constant turmoil, besieged
by thousands of desperate visa seekers
who came from all parts of the nation, trooping around the entrances of the
many Western embassies in the circular road, blocking thoroughfare. They
arrived as early as 1am with a slip certifying that they had paid the
exorbitant non-refundable visa application fee. British official and American
personnel would come out to perform the arduous task of handing out the morning’s
appointment forms, assisted by three armed policemen. The applicants would be
put in queues that covered half the crescent. But these lines never lasted, as
the candidates soon broke them, rushing noisily towards the officials who would
attempt to withdraw from the general chaotic grab for the forms. The potential travelers would scamper over others in the inevitable stampede, cursing,
spitting, pushing, elbowing, kicking, scratching and fighting with one another
for pr-eminence, but always ensuring that they did not harm the visa officials
in whose hands their travel destiny lay. The officials would refuse to issue
more forms until the potential travelers resumed in an orderly fashion, which
they would quickly do, but the order never lasted more than a few minutes
before desperation disrupted the files again, leading to more abuse, struggle
and fisticuffs. When the quagmire became too dangerous for the officials to
continue their assignment, the policemen would lash out in all directions with
horsewhips, brandishing their rifles and threatening to shoot into the crowd.
The sharing of forms would continue only when they achieved relative
tranquillity. Those who were lucky to receive the forms would sit in the
waiting space by the lagoon opposite the embassies or lie on the grass until
the missions opened to clients at 8:30 am. Then the long queue would begin to
move the somnambulant candidates towards their interviewers who were by no
means enthusiastic about seeing these unruly hordes of African desperadoes take
over their home countries, under the strict control of dozens of Nigerian
anti-riot policemen and the stricter supervision of the expatriate embassy
policemen and security operatives. The
emigrant lines reduced as one after the other the hopeful candidates were
hoarded away with rejection slips, dreams of prosperity deferred, dawn
gradually evolving into day, day into dusk. At the lagoon-front opposite Louis
Farrakhan crescent passports expertly changed photographs, candidates
re-christened, returned to the queues without which they knew they would never
achieve their life’s fulfillment, as only poverty, want, disease and a lifetime
of strife and degradation awaited them at home.
The
Italian Embassy was never crowded like its British, German, and American
counterparts, but it had a respectably large crowd whose peculiarity was its
femininity. Their Russian neighbours had nobody at all despite their wide
compound, massively regal embassy building full of long American limousines,
and their well-publicized scholarship grants to African students.
The
tall comely-faced young black man meandered through the anxious terrain and
finally managed to reach the entrance. Admission into the embassy gate without
an appointment was a near impossibility, but he showed his Italian passport and
that got him inside the compound in minutes. He explained to the security man
that he was going to the consulate. A uniformed corporate guard escorted him
into the building. An enormous oily coal-black Nigerian woman button-opened the
electronically controlled glass door leading into the main embassy hall. The
visitor was escorted through the corridor to the window by the right, in which
a bespectacled ursine Italian woman whose face crinkled with mounds of fat
attended to Africans. From her generous make up, powder and heavy lipstick,
Chuddy Mokelu could make out that the official had made an unsuccessful attempt
to look good, an objective she could have achieved more easily by just eating
less. He waited in the queue until it got to his turn.
‘Good morning Madam, my name is Chuddy
Mokelu, I am an Italian citizen resident here’, he said in flawless Italian.
The woman looked at him with the suspicious eyes of one who listened daily to
intricate lies, received fake documents in a continuum and knew how to decipher
the fake from the real. Steel-reinforced massive bosom pushed forward, ‘what
can we do for you?’ she asked, her scrutiny which catalogued most Africans as
pestering visa applicants to be rapidly dispensed with, gazing harshly at him.
‘I
wish to register for social welfare support. I am going through hard times now
and while working in Italy I contributed to the welfare scheme for thirteen
years. I would like to receive my welfare check’, Chuddy explained.
The
woman pushed her glasses back to the bridge of her long fat nose, with an
expression that suggested that a sacrilege had been uttered. She seemed to have
sniffed something fishy as her face changed from suspicious to diffident. ‘Have
you got any identification?’
‘Yes
Madam, here is my European Community passport issued in Italy’, he handed over
the document to her. She scrutinized it thoroughly and with a look of antimony
handed it back to him, ‘have you got a certificate of citizenship? I am afraid a passport is no evidence of
citizenship’.
Chuddy’s brain scattered into little balls of
fire as he remembered the years of hardship he underwent before being
meritoriously granted Italian citizenship. ‘Madam, you must be out of your mind
to utter that kind of balderdash!’ he shouted uncontrollably, ‘I am a bonafide
Italian citizen! I may be Black and African but I am a European citizen bearing
an Italian passport on merit and nobody can deny me my rights!’
Two
Italian policemen, one, a short and fat private, the other, a tall, slim,
blue-eyed, viciously handsome blonde sergeant, and a Nigerian guard zealously
ran to the spot. ‘What is the matter?’ the Italian sergeant asked in sing-song
Italian English, eyeing Chuddy with leery intensity.
Chuddy
replied in Italian, raising his passport, ‘I am, an Italian citizen, here is my
passport. Let none of you touch me; I have the right to be here in Italian
territory! This public officer is trying to deny me my rights and subvert my
citizenship because of my black color and African origin!’
The
malevolent policemen who were unimpressed by his argument made to arrest him.
‘Sergeant Giovanni, what is going on there?’ came a baritone voice that
bore the hauteur of officialdom. The voice was gentle yet tainted with
unmistakable authority and an air of opulence.
‘It is this person here that is disturbing
the peace of the embassy’, replied the slim handsome officer.
Chuddy swung round. The man facing him was in
his early sixties, tall and well fed. He had a long pointed nose over which a
pair of silver-rimmed glasses balanced, his eyes were lucid and intense, their
stare peering and penetrating and a small red line for lips. His face was
handsome with carefully cut jet-black hair, perhaps too black for his age. He
wore a grey suit, white shirt, and a rich blue silk tie of the texture that you
did not see every day. His majestic presence and the aroma of the rich
masculine perfume swimming around him brought Chuddy’s voice to a gentle
whisper. ‘I am Chuddy Mokelu, an Italian citizen, a university graduate, I
studied and worked in Italy’.
A
flash of interest illuminated the man’s eyes and he smiled satisfactorily.
‘Congratulations, I am Dr Paolo Milani, The Italian Ambassador to Nigeria.’
Chuddy felt light headed and for some seconds
could not breath or think. The ambassador continued. ‘As an Italian citizen you
have a right to be here, come with me to my office’.
Chuddy followed him down the corridor,
turning right at the restricted area that was the envoy’s VIP reception. Fat
brightly colored sofas waited eagerly for the fattened bottoms of affluent
Nigerians and foreigners who had acquired privilege by living and doing
business in Nigeria. The second part was lined with steel shelves containing
important Italian and Nigerian newspapers and new and unknown publications and
journals freely sent to the embassy by editors who erroneously believed that
such gestures rather than quality journalism would improve their prospects. The
security men scattered, gaping at the ambassador with astounded eyes. The
ambassador’s office was spacious with three sitting sections of delicate
designer’s seats and cushions between large vases of tropical flowers. The new
seats left a poignant aroma of virgin leather in the air. His desk was wide and
made of pure mahogany and it was cluttered with a computer, two telephones, an
intercom, a cellular phone, a fax machine, Nigerian and Italian newspapers,
jotters and complimentary cards which obscured the deliberate comfort that the
office was furnished to give. A large portrait of the Italian president hung on
the wall behind the ambassador’s desk beside a flowing Italian flag. There was
an invisible force of authority within the office that made Chuddy hold his
breath. Dr Milani sat at his table and waved him into one of the three
armchairs opposite him. Chuddy sat down feeling uncomfortable in spite of his
prosperous surrounding and chilling air conditioning. He handed his passport to
the ambassador. Dr Milani examined it, turned the first page, pronounced his name
and surname in a funny way and returned it to him. ‘Young man, tell me what the
problem is’.
Chuddy
hesitated, feeling ashamed of his many stillborn business efforts. Then,
realizing that he had nothing to lose, he summoned courage and commenced his
Narration, pausing when the
phone rang, the fax buzzed, or when embassy staff came in to see their boss,
and resuming later.
BOB EJIKE
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