Centre for Counseling of Deportees & Refugees (CCDR). Our centre which was opened in 2006 with the sole aim of protecting, counselling and rehabilitating deportees and refugees in order to help them integrate easily into society. The centre was opened as a result of our humanitarian urge and in response to the growing number of displaced persons who flee their countries as a result of wars and illegal immigrants and other people who are deported from various countries regularly.
As you are aware deportees and refugees are products of poor economic development and constant wars in developing countries. The influx of such people into different countries has no doubt become a problem to such countries as well as to other nations.
The centre for Counselling of Deportees and Refugees (CCDR), Lagos, Nigeria, is a non-profit, non-governmental, non-religious, organization, which came into being by virtue of Registration No. CAC/IT/N022143 dated 28th October, 2006. The organization has since been working with local and international agencies and individuals.
Your call or visit to our office or an invitation to a meeting in your office in relation to our operations and possible areas of cooperation will be highly appreciated.
To the glory of God, the Centre for Counseling of Deportees & Refugees has launche …
MISSION STATEMENT
We are a non-profit, non-religious, non-governmental organization delivering practical services to Nigerian and other deportees from other country who find themselv…The centre for counselling of deportees and refugees is a registered non-governmental Organization. The centre was founded in 2006, by Rev Fr. Gabriel Feyisetan, OP, a dominican priest working in the Catholic Archdiocese of Lagos, south west Nigeria.
For over 2 years, Fr. Gabriel was the catholic chaplain at the national refugee camp, Oru-Ijebu, Ogun State, Nigeria. Here he was actively involved in counselling and ministering to a large number of Liberian refugees, here he observed the unfortunate plight of refugee situation, this moved the passion in him to plant a seed of hope in the lives of these unfortunate persons. This latter prompted the establishment of a humanitarian centre that will cater for African refugees and Nigeria deportees.
While addressing members of the centre at the first annual general meeting held on the 12th of May, 2007, Fr. Gabriel went ahead to give a brief description of how the whole idea started. At first it was not easy thinking about deportees, he said. Initially when I started receiving calls and emails from friends and international colleagues, especially from Germany and Switzerland, telling me of their efforts to assist deportees from African countries, especially Nigerians. I felt if foreigners could help Africans in their plight, why can’t we do something for our own people?’ Speaking further, “Fr. Gabriel said, he then went ahead to discuss the issue with few friends like Eng. Onubogu, Innocent Emeh, Captain Tony Oghide, Mr. Tony Okonkwo and Eng. Areoye who supported the idea. We started meeting and gradually the idea of an NGO was born in late 2006. Eng. Onubogu gave us an apartment for our office space while Mr. Tony Okonkwo donated some cash to the centre. Fr. Gabriel noted that the centre is not only for counselling but also to rehabilitate deportees.