Tag: NIS

  • Foreigners nabbed with illegally obtained voter’s cards in Oyo

    Foreigners nabbed with illegally obtained voter’s cards in Oyo

    The Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), Oyo State Command, says it has arrested and repatriated 18 foreigners for allegedly possessing voter’s cards.

    The NIS Comptroller in the state, Isah Dansuleiman, made this known during a sensitisation programme on the 2023 general elections for stakeholders in Ibadan on Wednesday.

    The theme of the sensitisation programme is “Credible Elections in Nigeria: What is expected of migrants before, during and after the Election”.

    Dansuleiman said that the migrants were arrested during a raid conducted in October by the command across the length and breath of the state.

    The Comptroller said that the foreigners violated the law of the land and were instantly repatriated to their various countries of origin.

    “No migrant regardless of their status should participate in the 2023 general elections and any migrant caught in possession of voters card will face the full wrath of the law.

    “Those using them know their status but use them for their selfish reasons to procure voters cards,” he said.

    The Comptroller warned migrants residing in Oyo State not to involve themselves in the 2023 general elections, saying they are allowed to stay in Nigeria to carry out their legal activities provided they have the required documents.

    Dansuleiman called on Nigerians to report any migrant trying to participate in the general elections.

    He assured Nigerians that the command would not relent at ensuring that the 2023 general elections is free, fair and credible.

    Dansuleiman further called on migrants who are yet to do the migrants re-registration to do so, saying that the command would soon go out to smoke them out.

  • Corruption stinks in passport offices as Nigerians knock NIS for extortion

    Corruption stinks in passport offices as Nigerians knock NIS for extortion

     

    Nigerians have raised the alarm over the inability of the electronic passport application system of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) to curb extortion of applicants across the nation, instead incidences of bribery are increasing.

    Passport applicants affected by the reign of corruption at immigration made known their plight during an anti-corruption radio programme, PUBLIC CONSCIENCE, produced by the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development, PRIMORG, Wednesday in Abuja.

    The lamentation by passport applicants is coming on the heels of a recent investigative report published by the International Center for Investigative Reporting (ICIR), revealing that the electronic passport application of the Nigeria Immigration Service is facing sabotage by corrupt officials.

    During the radio programme, many citizens narrated how they met bottlenecks at passport offices while seeking to get new international passports or renew an old one. Most of them said they paid higher than the approved money to the Nigeria Immigration Service personnel or had no choice but to bribe an official to get their passports on time.

    A victim of the exploitation, Emmanuel David, a resident of Abuja, revealed that he missed out on a scholarship abroad because he was following due process, describing his experience as one he doesn’t wish his enemy to go through.

    David said he had an ugly experience in the Abuja office and that many people like him are frustrated daily.

    “Sincerely speaking, thousands, millions of people out there are crying out because of this. So, if you pay online and get to the passport office, they will give you a chair to sit outside. You might sit there from morning to night and return the way you came without anything being done. If not for you to stand up and ask, please, I came for capturing, the first thing you will hear them ask is which officer is in charge of your passport.

    “I applied in March 2022. I got my passport in August 2022. I had to pay an extra twenty-five thousand naira to process it,” David narrated.

    An investigative journalist with the International Center for Investigative Reporting (ICIR), Nurudeen Akewushola, disclosed that Nigerians in their numbers are affected by the scheming of immigration officials who end up extorting them in the long run.

    Akewushola stated that the Center had had volumes of extortion reports from Nigerians seeking international passports in Abuja, the nation’s capital, Lagos, Niger, and other states of the federation.

    “I was able to speak with people who applied in Lagos, in Abuja, and people who were extorted in other passport offices, but for the undercover investigation, I went to the NIS headquarters and observed that this is actually happening.”

    He stressed that without making the officers perpetrating the corrupt act at passport offices scapegoats, there would be no change. He knocked the Nigeria Immigration authorities for doing nothing to prosecute its officials extorting Nigerians despite ICIR publishing the faces of the indicted officers on the investigative report.

    “The NIS has not shown true commitment to wanting to tackle this menace. After the investigation, I called the NIS spokesperson and informed him, and he said it was a lie. So, we published the information, and they saw it.

    “After that, we invited them to a Twitter space to speak with Nigerians, but they didn’t come, and since we published that report, nothing was said or done, not even a press statement. So, the NIS needs to show true commitment. They need to make scapegoats out of people that are defaulting.

    “It’s not too much for the NIS to prosecute these officers,” Akewushola stated.

    On her part, the Monitoring and Evaluation Officer at the Center for Transparency Advocacy, Stephanie Omere, called on the Federal Government and immigration authorities to embark on vigorous sensitization of the general public to curb officials taking advantage of the citizens.

    Some Nigerians who called in during the radio had these to say:

    Jacob from Garki, Abuja, said: “I renewed my passport for ten years and I paid the officer about N95,000, and I feel they should put a tracking for the electronic version so that we can track the position of the passport at every moment so that the duration of production is seen online.”

    Ashedu from Wuse 2, Abuja: “This issue has really gotten deep, and it’s not just for us to excuse a system, but there must be an overhaul of the whole system. If not, it will not work.

    “If we want this new system to work, we must set up departments that follow up and make sure that the system is not being jeopardized.”

    Solomon from Abuja also stated, “Honestly, what is going on in the immigration office is terrible. My friend that works there told me that I shouldn’t bother with doing online because it would take forever, but I’ll have to pay an officer who fast-tracked the process for me, and I got my passport within the space of 2 weeks, but that is not the way to go. If there’s a way to sanitize the system by punishing those officers that make the process not to work, that’s the way to go.”

    Public Conscience is a syndicated weekly anti-corruption radio program used by PRIMORG to draw government and citizens’ attention to corruption and integrity issues in Nigeria.

    The program has the support of the MacArthur Foundation.

  • ASUU Strike: NANS suspends protest in Kaduna-Abuja road

    ASUU Strike: NANS suspends protest in Kaduna-Abuja road

    The leadership of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has shelved  its plans to block major highways especially the  Kaduna-Abuja road.

    The student body cited security reasons and need to respect constituted authority as reasons for suspending the strike.

    It also added that there were appeals from higher authority asking that the proposed protest be shelved.

    The students’ union, through the Chairman, Taskforce on End ASUU Strike, Dominic Philip, said the union suspended the protest following the intervention of the Commissioner of Police in the state and other security agencies.

    The Kaduna Commissioner for Internal Security and Home Affairs, Mr. Samuel Aruwan, had, on Tuesday evening warned the student body of the negative consequences of such an action.

    It was gathered that fierce looking security personnel were visible at the proposed venue to forstall any breakdown of law and order.

    The security personnel were seen stand at strategic locations at Gonin Gora road and some communities where the students could be hanging around.

    However, the National Industrial Court earlier today ruled that ASUU should call -off its seven-month old industrial action.

     

  • No passport booklets shortage in Nigeria – Minister

    No passport booklets shortage in Nigeria – Minister

    Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, says there is no passport booklets shortage in Nigeria, as the Federal Government has cleared all backlogs of passport applications.

    This is contained in a statement issued by the Minister’s  Media Adviser, Mr Sola Fasure, on Tuesday in Abuja.

    According to him,  the ministry has made efforts to make passports available to Nigerians.

    “In 2021 alone, we provided 1.3 million passports to Nigerians. As at today, there is no booklets shortage in Nigeria.

    “As at the second quarter of 2022, the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) has provided 645,000 passports out of the 750,000 applications received.

    “To address the challenge of the backlog, we have sent 11,000 booklets to Ikoyi, 11,000 to Alausa and 8,000 to FESTAC centres in Lagos State.

    “We have also sent sufficient booklets to all the centres nationwide to address this challenge,” the minister said.

    He added that 10,000 passport booklets have been deployed to the new Port Harcourt passport production centre, to fast track passport issuance in the area.

    The minister said that the centre would now be responsible for passport demands from Rivers, Cross River, Akwa Ibom and Bayelsa.

    Aregbesola said that with these efforts, there was no excuse again for delays and non-issuance of passport within reasonable period across the country.

    The minister urged those seeking for passport to apply online to avoid being shortchanged by unscrupulous elements.

    “I will urge applicants for the Nigerian passport to apply early enough before their travel date to avoid cutting corners and falling into the hands of scammers and other opportunists.

    “It is important also that they apply by themselves through the NIS portal and not through touts and unscrupulous officials, which often brings heartaches,” he added.

    Aregbesola said that a six weeks and three weeks window for fresh application and renewal respectively had been provided after biometric data capture, within which the passport will be ready.

    “This timeline is to enable NIS investigate and validate the claims of applicants and confer integrity on the passport issued.

    “It is a reasonable provision in passport administration by global standard. There is no wait-and-get passport service anywhere in the world,” the minister said.

    He explained that in addition to the standardised timeline, the NIS had introduced tracking mechanism to enable applicants monitor the progress of their application.

    “We are also introducing data capture centres all over the country before the end of 2022, to eliminate physical contacts with NIS officials,” he added.

    He pledged that the Federal Government would continue to introduce necessary innovations in passport administration to serve applicants better.

  • Allow Nigerians with expired passports to return home – Aregbesola orders NIS

    Allow Nigerians with expired passports to return home – Aregbesola orders NIS

    The Minister of Interior, Mr Rauf Aregbesola, has directed the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), to allow Nigerians in diaspora to return to Nigeria with their expired International Passports.

    Aregbesola gave the directive on Wednesday, in Lagos, while responding to a complaint by a Nigerian-American citizen, Mr Jamui Kasumu, at the Alausa Passport Office during his unscheduled visit to the facility.

    He said Nigerians in diaspora were free to come back home with expired or non-expired Nigerian passport.

    The Minister said no Nigerian needed travel certificate to come back home, except children, whose parents were Nigerians, but their identity were yet to be established according to immigration rule.

    “I am using this medium to instruct all Nigeria Immigration Officers World-Wide to accord Nigerian travellers with expired Passport use such passports to return safely back home henceforth,” he said.

    The Minister also advised Nigerians in diaspora to update their travel document ahead of time to avoid rush during emergency.

    Earlier, a Nigerian-American citizen, Mr Jamui Kasumu complained to the Minister that the Nigeria Immigration in America and Delta airline prevented him from coming to Nigeria because of expired Nigerian passport.

    Kasumu said he was able to return to Nigeria after he got travel certificate he obtained through a relation in Nigeria.

    “I am appealing to you sir that the Immigration should allow Nigerians with expired Passport to come back to their country,” he said.

  • “Release Ukpo’s biodata to Ekweremadu, wife” – Court orders NIS, others

    Justice Inyang Ekwo of a Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), the National Identify Management Commission (NIMC) and some banks to release the biodata information of David Ukpo to the detained former Deputy President, Ike Ekweremadu and his wife Beatrice.

     

    Justice Ekwo gave the order in a ruling on Friday after listening to the lawyer to Ekweremadu and his wife, Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN).

    Court

     

    Ekweremadu and his wife had in a suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/984/2022 urged the court to among others, order the defendants to supply them with the certified true copies (CTC) of David Ukpo’s biodata information in their care to aid their (plaintiffs) defence in their trial before a United Kingdom Magistrates’ Court, where they are accused of plotting to harvest Ukpo’s organ (kidney).

     

    Other defendants in the suit are: the Comptroller General (C-G), Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS); Stanbic-IBTC Bank; United Bank of Africa (UBA) and Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS) Plc.

     

    At the mention of the case on Friday, Awomolo withdrew against NIBSS, following which Justice Ekwo struck its name off the suit.

     

    Although Awomolo said all the defendants were served, only the UBA was represented by a lawyer among all the defendants.

    Court

     

    When asked by the judge if his client was served, UBA’s lawyer, G. O. Maduka acknowledged service.

     

    Maduka added that, after going through the plaintiffs’ motion on notice, he felt there was no need to react.

     

    Awomolo proceeded to move the motion and drew the court’s attention to letters written by some of the defendants, indicating that they would not honour the plaintiffs’ request for information on Ukpo until there was a court order to that effect.

     

    Ruling, Justice Ekwo said he was satisfied that the defendants had been served with the relevant court documents.

     

    The judge added that by the averments in the application by Ekweremadu and his wife, he was satisfied that their prayers were out to be granted.

     

    “I make an order granting the prayers,” Justice Ekwo ruled.

  • Ekweremadu: Immigration confirms age of touted organ donor

    The Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) has confirmed the age of David Ukpo, the touted organ donor in the saga involving Senator Ike Ekweremadu and wife, Beatrice to be 21.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that the Comptroller General of NIS, Isa Jere made the confirmation while speaking to newsmen on Sunday.

    Jere confirmed that Ukpo is actually 21 years and not 15 as carried in many media reports.

    Recall Ekweremadu and his wife were arrested by The Metropolitan Police at the Heathrow Airport, London for alleged human trafficking and organ harvesting.

    They were arraigned on Thursday before Uxbridge Magistrates Court, but were denied bail and remanded in custody till July 7.

  • Nigerian collects passport two weeks after calling out NIS for delay, extortion

    A Nigerian man Fagemi Remi, unable to pay for his tuition abroad due to delays with getting his passport renewed, has now collected his travel document barely two weeks after he called out the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) FESTAC branch office for exceeding the average three weeks processing time for passport renewals/reissue.

    Remi had applied online for his expired passport to be renewed and was captured on 17th February 2022 at the NIS FESTAC office in Lagos. Since then, efforts to collect the passport were unsuccessful, forcing him to call out the office on twitter on the 13th of May.

    Providing an update on the situation on Wednesday 1st June, Remi said: “Although, I couldn’t meet up with a lot of deadlines, wasted time and money but in all thanks to @MinOfInteriorNG @raufaregbesola and the @nigimmigration for their intervention. I collected my passport yesterday 31st of May.”

    “We would keep hope alive and continue pushing,” he added.

    The NIS inability to meet its average processing time deadlines of six and three weeks for first time applications and renewals respectively, has ranged from shortage in passport booklets, to the backlog caused by the coronavirus lockdown and now recently, to challenges posed by linkage with the National Identity Management System (NIMC).

    In addition, some NIS officials and agents have continued to fleece Nigerians, charging well above the official prices for both the 32-page and 64-page document.

    For instance, while the official price for a 64-page Nigerian passport with 5 and 10 years validity period is N35, 000 and N70,000 respectively, applicants are charged between N100, 000 – N200, 000.

    Similarly, while the new 32-page passport with a five-year validity period is officially N25,000, applicants for are charged between N40, 000 – N70, 000.

    Remi told TNG that he paid N55, 000 for the renewal of his 32-page passport which is valid for five years.

    The minister of Interior Rauf Aregbesola, had announced that under the new regime of passport processing and issuance which became effective June 1, 2021, applicants would have no basis for further communication with officials, upon the completion of their application process.

    Aregbesola added that “special centres” would be established on a public-private partnership basis for expedited passport services. He said these centres would have nationwide spread.

    However, this newspaper observed that passport processing remained largely the same and is characterized by delays and extortion at NIS offices particularly in Lagos and Abuja, as well as other branches across the country.

    Passport applicants who do not have their National Identity Cards, cannot proceed for capturing and are compelled to part with more money to fast-track the process.

     

  • Passport issuance: Nigerians lament extortion at immigration offices, task govt on tackling fraud

    Passport issuance: Nigerians lament extortion at immigration offices, task govt on tackling fraud

    The Federal Government has been asked to take punitive action against officials of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) fingered in the extortion of passport applicants at various immigration offices nationwide.

    The calls were made during a radio discussion of an investigative report by Daily Trust, which exposed how Immigration officers in Lagos and Oyo states run a well-coordinated chain of corruption over international passport issuance.

    The report says the officials collude with agents to compromise the established process of obtaining a passport for an agreed amount of money.

    Some staffers of the Nigeria Immigration were said to have been secretly filmed extorting passport applicants who were either impatient to follow due process or frustrated by the length of time applying for an international passport takes. The report said they (NIS officials) inflated the passport prices and helped applicants falsify necessary documents like birth certificates and state of origin.

    Political Economist and Public Development Researcher, Adefolarin Olamilekan led the call for the Federal Government to immediately tackle corruption in passport issuance during an anti-corruption radio programme, PUBLIC CONSCIENCE, produced by the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development, PRIMORG, Wednesday in Abuja.

    Olamilekan described the development as evil and dangerous, noting that the involvement of immigration officers in the passport fraud is the height of a lack of patriotism which must be condemned.

    He urged the Acting Comptroller-General of Nigeria Immigration Service, Isah Jere Idris, Minister of Interior Rauf Aregbesola and the National Security Adviser, Mohammed Babagana Monguno, to take punitive action against immigration officials exploiting the system to defraud passport applicants in Nigeria.

    He said the ongoing corruption portends doom for the country as it encourages the falsification of sensitive documents by applicants.

    “The Minister of Interior, the Adviser to the President on National Security, is responsible for this issue because documents are being falsified, and foreigners are taking advantage of this to become Nigerians illegally. The Comptroller General of Immigration must stand out.

    “We have heard so many good things that he’s doing, but this particular issue that his men are deeply in dirty deals in processing National passports for citizenship is something that he must stand out to correct or else posterity will not remember him for good,” Olamilekan warned.

    He called on the Service and the National Orientation Agency (NOA) to enlighten Nigerians on how to legitimately obtain passports without patronizing touts while urging the federal government to harmonize citizens’ data to reduce administrative bottlenecks and corruption in public service.

    Also reacting to the fleecing of passport applicants by immigration officials and touts, an investigative journalist with Daily Trust, Peter Moses, called on the authorities to ensure NIS staff exposed in the investigation are made to face the full weight of the law.

    Moses, who stated that the unavailability of passport booklets from time to time was adding to the problem, criticized the printing of Nigerian passports outside the country’s shores.

    “Today, passport booklets that usually create all those bottlenecks for the delay are still being printed outside Nigeria. My advice is that the federal government should first find a way of printing booklets in Nigeria, which I believe is one of the key steps to stopping all these corrupt practices. “Online application should be made to work. Moses recommended that physical interaction between NIS officials and passport applicants should be limited,” Moses recommended.

    Some citizens who called in during the radio programme from Abuja, the nation’s capital, said the extortion of passport applicants by immigration officials was happening in other states of the federation.

    They had these experiences to share:

    Paul said, “The corruption issue in NIS is not only in Lagos and Oyo states. It also happens in Abuja. Years back, I visited the immigration office in Gwagwalada, Abuja. They told me passport booklets were not available until I met a God-fearing lady who came to my rescue.”

    Charlie: “I wasn’t aware of the official price. I went to the immigration office but ended up falling into the hands of a third party and spent N35,000 in the process.”

    Sanni: “Some weeks back, I went to the Headquarters office of immigration in Abuja. I wanted to get my passport, someone told me to pay N50,000 for a passport booklet, but I didn’t have the money. I walked round and round. I found out that there was nothing I could do. So I ended up paying N45,000 for it.”

    Public Conscience is a syndicated weekly anti-corruption radio program used by PRIMORG to draw government and citizens’ attention to corruption and integrity issues in Nigeria.

    The program has the support of the MacArthur Foundation.

  • Customs intercepts firearms at Lagos airport

    Customs intercepts firearms at Lagos airport

    The operatives of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) at Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA) have intercepted a pistol with two magazines containing 26 rounds of ammunition.

    The Public Relations Officer of the command, DSC Victor Ogagbor, made this known in a statement made available to newsmen in Lagos on Thursday.

    According to Ogagbor, the items were intercepted while on routine examination at the ‘D’ wing of the Arrival Hall MMIA, at about 11.05 hours on April 13.

    He added that the items were seen in baggage belonging to one Mr Afolabi Olumide with Passport number B50120017 who arrived from Washington DC via United Airlines.

    “The suspected passenger had earlier been accused by Nigeria Immigration Service of illegally being in possession of two International Passports,” he said.

    He said that the importation of the firearm contravenes Schedule 4 of the Customs and Excise and Management Act which was an Absolute Prohibition.

    “The NCS MMIA command has since handed over the suspect and the arms to the Department of States Services,” he said.