By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi There are scores of fake quotes about Nigerians and Africans attributed to Donal...
By Farooq A. Kperogi,
Ph.D.
Twitter:@farooqkperogi
There are scores of
fake quotes about Nigerians and Africans attributed to Donald Trump that have
fooled many otherwise intelligent people. On April 9, 2016 I wrote an article
titled, “Trump is a Bigot but He Never Said Anything against Nigerians” to dispel the
ridiculously false statements Trump allegedly made against Nigerians.
On November 11, 2016,
BBC also did a story titled, “Mythbuster: What Donald Trump didn't say about Africa,” which basically said Trump never said
anything about Africans. In spite of this, prominent, educated Nigerians
continue to fall victim to fake news stories about what Trump allegedly said
about Nigerians and Africans.
Even Professor Wole
Soyinka, in a recent write-up, appeared to believe the fake quote
attributed to Trump about Nigerians and Africans. So does the prolific northern
Nigerian writer Dr. Aliyu Tilde, who repeated the falsehood in a recent
Facebook status update.
In view of the
resilience of the fake Trump quotes about Nigerian—and Africans— I have decided
to republish my article on this issue in hopes that more people will learn that
Trump never said anything about Nigerians or Africans. Enjoy:
Republican presidential front runner Donald Trump has become
the favorite punching bag of Nigerians on the Internet. All manner of bizarre
things are now attributed to him on dodgy, fringe Nigerian websites, and lots
of credulous Nigerians believe them.
Here is a random sample of headlines from Nigerian websites:
“Trump to Buhari - You Say Biafra Is a Joke, Compare Your Change with
Corruption,” “WHERE IS THE CHANGE!!! DONALD TRUMP INSULTS NIGERIA
ADMINISTRATION,” “Donald Trump throws heavy blow at Nigerian leaders.”
In internet jargon, this is called clickbait—that is,
intentionally false, provocative, or hyperbolic headlines designed to compel
people to click on links so as to attract web traffic and advertising dollars
to websites. Donald Trump has become the biggest anchor for clickbait on
fraudulent Nigerian websites.
Perhaps the most widely spread hoax about Trump in
Nigerian cyber sphere is the “If-I-win-you-leave” meme. It’s been shared by
traditional news sites like Leadership, AIT, and by many otherwise clearheaded
social media influencers.
Well, Donald Trump
has never ever said he will deport Nigerians in America if he gets elected
president. That was an internet hoax that began life as a satire and given
wings by gullible, simpleminded Nigerian Internet users.
In a January 8, 2016
post, Snopes.com, the American-based fact-checking website, said the quote attributed to Trump was false. “[…] Trump did not have a rally in Wichita,
Kansas, as alleged by the above-quoted article, at any point in January 2016.
The quote has also not been recorded by any major publications at any point. In
sum, this is nothing more than yet another fictional quote falsely attributed to
a politician,” Snopes said.
I shared this
clarification on my Facebook timeline on January 18 and hoped that people would
stop sharing this transparently fake news. However, several Nigerians continue
to peddle the falsehood that Donald Trump said he would deport Nigerians should
he get elected president of the United States.
I was particularly
surprised when I found that as recently as April 1, 2016, Dr. Hakeem
Baba-Ahmed, a respected retired bureaucrat and Daily Trust columnist, shared the same discredited falsehood on his
Facebook page. Several people who look up to him not only believed the hoax but
continue to circulate and lend it credibility. That’s sad.
As I pointed out in January this year, one doesn’t even need
any verification from any fact-checking site to know that the quote was a hoax.
There are just too many red flags.
For starters,
Nigerians aren't even numerically significant enough in the US to deserve
Trump's attention. (As of 2013, according to Pew Research Center, there were only 228,000 Nigerians in the United
States. That’s not a lot of people in a country of over 320 million people).
Secondly, there is no
discernible reason why Trump would single out Nigerians for anything. In other
words, no occasion called for Trump to focus his attention on Nigeria or
Nigerians.
It's obvious why he singled out Muslims, Mexicans, and the
Chinese for xenophobic verbal attacks. His outrageous statement about
temporarily halting Muslim travel and immigration to the US was actuated by the
Syrian refugee crisis AND the terrorist attack in San Bernardino, California,
on December 2, 2015. The attack, perpetrated by Muslims, ignited a debate here
about Muslims, and Trump was reacting to that debate.
Hispanics are the largest minority group (and the fastest
growing demographic group) in the US who share a common boundary with the
United States. American conservatives have always been concerned about
(illegal) immigration from Mexico (America’s next-door neighbor to the south)
and other Latin American countries. Trump was merely playing to the American
conservative gallery when he stereotyped Mexican immigrants in the United
States as rapists, killers, and drug dealers.
China is America's biggest business partner to which it is
greatly indebted, so Trump regularly punches the country in his speeches.
So why would he pick on Nigeria and Nigerians? Absolutely no
reason. Nigeria has zero consequence for America’s national interest. In
fact, I doubt that Trump is even aware that there is a country called Nigeria.
But, most importantly, every racist and obnoxious comment
Trump has made since the beginning of his campaign has videographic corroboration.
None of the websites that carried the "news" of his remarks against
Nigerians showed a video clip. In this era of ever-present cameras it should
stretch anyone's credulity that Trump would say something as stupid as saying
he would violate his country's constitution by expelling citizens of another
nation resident in the US for no apparent reason.
If he actually said that, there would be a frenzied
debate in the American and international media, (as there was when he said the
stupid things he said about Muslims, Mexicans, and Chinese people), not
necessarily because of the Nigerians he allegedly said he would expel, but
because of the ignorance of the constitution that would betray—yet again. He
would have been the butt of late-night jokes.
Additionally, I expect any averagely educated person to at
least check the websites of American news organizations for corroboration
before sharing the "news" of what Trump allegedly says. It doesn't
take a lot to do that.
In all of this, what
worries me the most, though, is the astonishing willingness of Nigerians to
believe anything that is published on the Internet.
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