Tag: UK

  • UK appoints Cynthia Rowe as Development Director for Nigeria

    UK appoints Cynthia Rowe as Development Director for Nigeria

    The UK government has appointed Ms Cynthia Rowe as the Development Director for the British High Commission in Nigeria.

    The British High Commission Communications Office in Abuja said on Thursday Rowe takes over from Mr Christopher Prycroft who recently concluded four years as Development Director of the mission in Nigeria.

    According to the communications office, Rowe is an experienced development diplomat and practitioner who has worked in different parts of the world including Nepal, Afghanistan, and Sierra Leone.

    Before becoming the Development Director for the British High Commission in Nigeria, Rowe served as the Head of Governance, Political, and Services, at the British Embassy in Kathmandu.

    Before then, she served as the Senior Councillor for policy in the Department for International Development, Tanzania, and as the Head of Mission/Lead for Ebola Operations in Sierra Leone.

    In the UK, she helped redesign UK Local Government systems and scrutinised the performance of governments in her work with the Audit Commission.

    She has worked in both the private and public sectors.

    Rowe was awarded two Service Medals for her work in Afghanistan and her work on Ebola.

    To mark her arrival in Nigeria, she said, “I am delighted to be in Nigeria, one of the most remarkable countries in the world for its talents, opportunities, and challenges.

    “I am passionate about the UK’s close relationship with Nigeria, and partnership will be the cornerstone of my work here.

    “I am hugely encouraged by the work that has already been achieved by my predecessor in the areas of health, education, and governance, and of our work with women and girls.

    “I am also hugely encouraged to help where there is humanitarian need.

    “I very much look forward to working with UK government colleagues, together with the government of Nigeria to advance Nigeria’s development agenda.”

  • UK to send 20,000 troops to largest NATO exercise

    UK to send 20,000 troops to largest NATO exercise

    Britain will send 20,000 service personnel to one of NATO’s largest military exercises since the Cold War, as the alliance practices repelling an invasion by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s forces.

    Defence Secretary Grant Shapps will announce the deployment of Army, Navy and RAF members to the 31-nation drill across Europe during a speech in London on Monday.

    He said that the contribution to the Steadfast Defender exercise will provide “vital reassurance against the Putin menace” as he warns the West stands at a “crossroads.”

    The war games came after the ministers announced a further £2.5 billion ($3.2 billion) support package to Ukraine and the RAF airstrikes, with the United States, on the Houthis in Yemen.

    Shapps will set out his vision for how the UK will deter threats, as allies remain concerned about the threat posed by Putin as his war approaches its second year.

    In the Lancaster House speech, Shapps is expected to say: “We are in a new era and we must be prepared to deter our enemies, prepared to lead our allies and prepared to defend our nation whenever the call comes.

    “Today our adversaries are busily rebuilding their barriers, old enemies are reanimated, battle lines are being redrawn, the tanks are literally on Ukraine’s lawn and the foundations of the world order are being shaken to their core.

    “We stand at a crossroads.”

    Some 16,000 troops with tanks, artillery and helicopters will be deployed from the British Army across Eastern Europe starting from next month as part of the exercise.

    The Royal Navy will deploy more than 2,000 sailors across eight warships and submarines, while more than 400 Royal Marines Commandos will be sent to the Arctic Circle.

    The RAF will use F-35B Lightning attack aircraft and Poseidon P-8 surveillance aircraft.

    Defence sources said that the exercise will prepare for the invasion of a member state by any aggressor, with the main threats being considered to be from Russia and from terrorism

     

     

  • Japa: UK bans Nigerian students, others from bringing in family members

    Japa: UK bans Nigerian students, others from bringing in family members

    The United Kingdom on Monday announced that it had commenced the implementation of its policy banning Nigerian students and other overseas students from bringing in dependants via the study visa route.

    This was made known in the UK Home Office post on X, hinting that only those on postgraduate research or government-sponsored scholarship students will be exempted from the development.

     

    “We are fully committed to seeing a decisive cut in migration. From today, new overseas students will no longer be able to bring family members to the UK. Postgraduate research or government-funded scholarships students will be exempt,” the Home Office said.

    Recall that in May 2023, the United Kingdom put in place a law to stop Nigerian students, and others studying in the UK from bringing family as dependents except under specific circumstances.

    This is as the UK government aims to bring down immigration into the country which stands at about one million.

    Under the new rule, the UK will remove the permission for international students to switch out of the student route and into work routes before their studies have been completed to prevent misuse of the visa system.

    The UK government has also promised to clampdown on  agents who sell immigration instead of education.

    “there will also be a review of the maintenance requirement for students and dependents and a crackdown on ‘unscrupulous’ education agents who make use of inappropriate applications to sell immigration, not education.”

    A statement on the UK’s Home Office official site adds that the “New government restrictions to student visa routes will substantially cut net migration by restricting the ability for international students to bring family members on all but post-graduate research routes and banning people from using a student visa as a backdoor route to work in the UK.

    “The ONS estimated that net migration was over 500,000 from June 2021 to June 2022. Although partly attributed to the rise in temporary factors, such as the UK’s Ukraine and Hong Kong schemes, last year almost half a million student visas were issued while the number of dependants of overseas students has increased by 750 per cent since 2019, to 136,000 people.”

    The Home Office also added that the UK government made this decision in its commitment to the public to lower overall migration and ensure that migration to the UK was highly skilled and provided the most benefit.

    The Home Office noted that the decisons taken is in the overall interest of all as education is being prioritized.

    “the government to continue to meet its International Education Strategy commitments while making a tangible contribution to reducing net migration to sustainable levels. The government has also made clear that the terms of the graduate route remain unchanged.”

  • When in Rome, sorry, UK… – By Francis Ewherido

    When in Rome, sorry, UK… – By Francis Ewherido

    When I read the story of a Nigerian nurse who was ALLEGEDLY sacked in the United Kingdom and deported to Nigeria by the management of her hospital after she was found praying for an elderly patient, I was sad but not surprised. The laws are clear. You were employed as a nurse, not an intercessor or prayer warrior. Stick to job description. The British society sees religion as a personal matter. Do not bring in your religion in your interactions with patients. They separate work and religion. It is not like in Nigeria where offices start the day with prayers. But of what use is this prayer when it does not reflect in the way we go about our duties for the rest of the day after the prayers? I was once involved in a police matter. When I went to see the police woman the first time, I saw a bible on her table. I was elated, but at the end of the day, “police do im work.” A senior police officer was the boss of the IPO handling another case that took me to the police station. He would leave me at prayer time to go to the mosque to pray. “At the end police do im work,” so?

    It is not as if the hospital authorities do not believe in God. In fact, in the hospital where I was admitted, there is a place for prayers for Catholics, Anglicans and other Christians; Muslims, followers of Judaism, Hindus and other Asian religions, etc. Even the hospital workers can go the place to pray during their break period as a personal observance. The hospital has chaplains for Catholics, Protestants and clerics for other religions. The hospital asks patients on admission if they need a cleric and if a patient does, the cleric comes around at specified times to attend to patients’ spiritual needs. What is not tolerated is medical personnel praying for patients, preaching to patients, trying to convert patients to their religious beliefs and other obvious religious actions towards patients.

    Nigerian medical personnel in the UK are very much aware of this, but some are ready to take the risks just spread their “gospel” and “evangelize.” This nurse did not need to make her prayers obvious. Jesus laid his hands on a few sick people and healed them (Mark 6:5), yes.

    “Jesus came into Peter’s house, he saw Peter’s mother-in-law lying in bed with a fever. He touched her hand and the fever left her…,” yes. (Matthew 8:14 to 16). The same Jesus was on his way to the home of the centurion. While he was still on the way, the centurion sent a message to him that he was unworthy to have Jesus under his roof. “Only say the words and my servant will be healed.” That was it. The servant had no physical encounter with Jesus, but he was healed. This powerful profession of faith has become an important part of the Mass in the Catholic Church and Communion Service in the Anglican Church. The nurse could have prayed in faith for the woman without making it obvious. God does the healing, not man.

    Nigerian Christians “too-do.” I had an emergency case and was taken to the emergency section of a hospital in the UK. The first young male doctor who attended to me was apparently racist and treated my case with levity. A day or two later, I was rushed back. This time around, I was attended to by another doctor, a female and also Caucasian. When the tests came out and she reviewed my file, she was mortified. She promptly reported the first doctor to the hospital authority for negligence to and he was placed on immediate suspension. I was admitted. As usual, there were many Nigerian nurses working in the hospital. One of them was warm and we got friendly. On the second day, she came to attend to me, she was apparently disappointed with the religious items she saw in my room. She saw an opportunity to change the faith of a “lost” Christian. She gave me Christian literatures to read. Even as she did, I could see fear and caution in her face. She knew I would not report her, but if her colleagues caught her, she would be sacked instantly.

    As she was engaging in her religious rascality in the guise of saving a “lost soul,” I wondered quietly: Why do some Nigerians love living on the edge of the cliff? Your goals in the UK is improve your economic wellbeing and support relatives back home. Why not stick to your goals and stop playing Jackie Chan. The laws governing the conduct of hospital personnel in the UK are real, not make believe. It is unethical for health workers in the UK to bring religion into their relationship with patients in any form. PERIOD. Keep your religious beliefs to yourself.

    Our religious “do-do” too much. In some streets where churches operated by Nigerians are located in London, around certain times when church services are supposed to be over on Sundays, motorists instinctively take alternate routes. That is because there must be traffic. Trust Nigerians. After service, we must stop “briefly” on the road to exchange pleasantries that can cumulatively keep other road users waiting sometimes for up to 15 minutes. We can worship God without becoming nuisance. As a Nigerian, I am very proud of how we have exported our culture, food, music, fashion, etc., abroad. The one that gladdens my heart most is the Nigerian food I can get to eat in London as if I am home. But we really need put only our best foot forward. Let us keep our lawlessness, rascality, fraud and illegal drug dealings at home. You do not export bad products. Look at our how internet fraud and drug trafficking have dealt immense blows on our image. The perception is only beginning to change now, thanks majorly to Afrobeat music.

    The Japa syndrome in Nigeria is fuelled by many factors. Our economic situation is a major factor, but for me, the biggest factor is our herd mentality. We just love jumping on the bandwagon in anything that is trending. It has happened in many areas in our lives: MMM, internet fraud, kidnapping, betting, etc. Many more Nigerians would Japa. I have no problems with it even as I am “unjapaable.” But before you japa, study the place you want to japa to. Everything is now online, so no excuses. For instance, in Nigeria, when you want to cross the road, you look to your left first before right. In the UK, it is different. If you look to your left first such a school boy error can send you to the grave. As for medical personnel, understand the ethics of medical practice of the country you want to japa to very well. The literature is also online. Not only that, you need to mend your mentality. This “nothing dey happen” mentality might fail you in West Africa, not to talk of Europe and America. The ethics and mentalities are different in Europe. Learn understand and live them. In this case, it is totally “when in Rome, do as the Romans do.”

  • ‘Japa’ blockade: Nigerians migrating to UK to face more hurdles

    ‘Japa’ blockade: Nigerians migrating to UK to face more hurdles

    UK Home Secretary, James Cleverly, has unveiled a set of new rules aimed at curbing migration.

    The UK is set to raise the minimum salary requirement for obtaining a skilled worker visa.

    Currently set at £26,000, the new threshold will be increased to £38,700.

    Cleverly told parliament on Monday that the implementation of the rules in the previous year could have resulted in a decrease of 300,000 migrants annually.
    BBC reports that those coming on health and social care visas will be exempt from the higher salary threshold.

    But overseas care workers will no longer be allowed to bring dependents—that is, their partners and children.

  • Japa: UK introduces stiff measures for Nigerian immigrants, others

    Japa: UK introduces stiff measures for Nigerian immigrants, others

    The United Kingdom on Monday introduced a stiffer measure aimed at cracking down on record levels of migration — a key battleground in a general election expected next year.

    According to the UK government, it would raise the minimum salary threshold for a skilled worker visa and prevent overseas health and social care staff from bringing family dependents to Britain.

    The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s office,  has labled the proposals as “the biggest clampdown on legal migration ever”.

    But critics said it would damage the state-run National Health Service (NHS), which faces staff shortages.

    Immigration is set to be a key issue in nationwide elections that must be held by January 2025 at the latest, and which the main opposition Labour party is currently favoured to win.

    Sunak has pledged to reduce new arrivals and has been under pressure ever since statistics released last month showed that net migration to Britain hit a high in 2022.

    The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the number of people who arrived in Britain last year was 745,000 more than the number who left.

    Interior minister James Cleverly said his plan would result in 300,000 fewer people coming to the UK in the coming years.

    “Enough is enough,” the home secretary told parliament as he laid out his proposals, which will take effect early next year.

    Cleverly said skilled foreign workers wanting a UK visa would have to earn £38,700 ($48,860), up from £26,200 and in line with the median full-time wage.

    He exempted health and social care workers, but said they would be prevented from bringing family dependents.

    NHS Providers, which represents hospital groups in England, said changes that might deter care workers from coming to the UK were “deeply concerning”.

    Care England, a charity representing independent adult social care providers, said immigration had been “saving the social care sector”. Staff shortages have been exacerbated by Brexit.

    Cleverly also raised the minimum income for family visas to £38,700 and confirmed restrictions on international students bringing dependents.

    He reaffirmed that Britain would increase the surcharge that migrants pay to access the NHS by 66 percent, to £1,035.

    Critics have said this effectively imposes a double charge on migrant workers, as employees also pay National Insurance charges, which go towards covering healthcare.

  • Nigerian man reportedly k!lls his wife in UK months after relocation

    Nigerian man reportedly k!lls his wife in UK months after relocation

    Olunife, a Nigerian X user, has recounted a rather shocking story about a Nigerian man in the United Kingdom (UK).

    Olunife disclosed that the Nigerian man reportedly k!lled his wife who was also with him in the UK. According to her, the couple relocated to the UK this year.

    She added that the incident happened after the mother of three filed a restraining order against her husband.

    “A Nigerian man killed his wife in the UK, they relocated this year.

    “She got a restraining order from the police and this man still found a way to kill her, 3 children are left parentless.

    “Mother dead, father heading to a lifetime in prison,” she said in a post on Sunday, December 3, 2023.

    According to Olunife, brother of the deceased made the announcement via a Facebook post.

    The post reads: “This is to officially announce the painful Exit of my dear sister, Nurse Owoeye Taiwo Morenikeji, married to Abodunde David Olubunmi of Ipoti Ekiti.

    “According to  Suffolk Police in the UK and the available documents/records sent to us via mail/ direct conversations from the UK Police, after thoroughly conducted investigations, despite been caught in the act, he (the husband) was declared the sole murderer of his wife (my sister).

    “And for the children, they are currently being taken care of by the UK social services. On this note , I want to tell the entire member of Owoeyes’ family, to stay calm (though painful) ¹as justice will be served on the killer in due course, be rest assured.

    “I want to thank UK Govt, Detectives Peter, Amy and the hired Private investigators, as well as the Nigeria Embassy in London for their professionalism.

    “To the Onigogo of  Igogo -Ekiti and Sons and Daughters of Igogo,  with alots of our friends especially in the  UK, we say thank you for your efforts so far. To the people that came from far and near to console, we appreciate.

    “Hmmmmm, To my Mum, though it’s an irreplaceable loss, please take heart (though not easy), it’s only God that can console you devinely. To the entire Amuludun dynasty, please NO to derogatory post, Calm down as we await his trial in the Court of the Uk. Thanks for your understanding……. Owoeye Adekunle G, for the family”.

  • Nigerian Passport offices to open across  cities in UK – Interior Minister, Olubunmi Ojo

    Nigerian Passport offices to open across cities in UK – Interior Minister, Olubunmi Ojo

    Nigeria’s minister of Interior, Olubunmi Ojo has said that front offices will open soon in some major cities across the United Kingdom, including Manchester, Birmingham and Cardiff.

    Ojo made this known while featuring on Channels Television’s Politics Today on Tuesday in Lagos.

    The Minister addressed major concerns of Nigerians in the foreign countries having difficulties in renewing their passports at foreign missions.

    “I think there are only two places where we have this challenge now, realistically. I think in the UK, precisely, London and in the US — precisely, in New York. And that has to do with the concentration of Nigerians,” Tunji-Ojo admitted.

    Zeroing in on the UK, where several viral cases have been recorded, he argued the only solution was to open passport front offices in key cities by February 2024.

    “There is no quick fix. But we have ensured Nigerians that by February next year, we would have opened our front offices such that we’ll have front offices in Manchester, Birmingham, Cardiff in Wales, and Scotland,” the minister said.

    “So, once we have this, definitely, it will reduce the stress of Nigerians, it will reduce the waiting period, and of course, it will bring efficiency into the whole passport procurement system.”

    Tunji-Ojo explained that the problem existed “because we have only one passport office in the entire United Kingdom”.

    According to him, Nigerians living in far-flung cities such as Edinburg (Scotland), Cardiff, and Belfast (North Ireland) as well as Manchester or Birmingham had no choice but to travel to London for their new passports.

    Noting that there were “hundreds of thousands of Nigerians resident in this country”, the interior minister stated that it was important to investigate the capacity that the immigration office can take in a day and how many people are asking for passports.

  • Portable cries out as Embassy denies his wife of visa to UK

    Portable cries out as Embassy denies his wife of visa to UK

    Controversial Nigerian singer, Habeeb Okikiola popularly known as portable has expressed his anger as he accused a foreign embassy of refusing to grant his wife a visa to accompany him to the UK for a performance.

    The singer was hoping to spend time with his wife before the show, but the embassy’s decision has upset him.

    According to portable, they are treating his wife unfairly because of issues they have with him. He also accused the embassy of trying to rip him off.

    This has caused frustration for the singer, who is set to perform in London on November 26th.

    He lamented, asking why they would treat his wife that way because he is the one who is a gangster, and they shouldn’t be taking out their fight with him on his wife.

    Bemoaning further, he claimed that the embassy is also trying to rip him.

     

     

  • How Big Tech poses ‘existential threat’ to UK journalism

    How Big Tech poses ‘existential threat’ to UK journalism

    The “anti-competitive practices” of big tech firms pose an “existential threat” to UK journalism, while the risks from AI-generated misinformation are “greater than ever before”, editors have warned.

    A poll by the News Media Association, a trade body for the newspaper industry, found 90 per cent of editors believe Google and Meta pose a threat to the news industry.

    The Government has been urged to resist calls to water down the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Bill, which will force tech firms to pay news publishers for content used on their platforms.

    Some 97 per cent of editors said the risks posed by AI-generated misinformation are “greater than ever before” in the run up to a general election, which is likely to take place next year.

    More than three-quarters (77 per cent) of editors said news blackouts enforced by tech platforms weaken democratic engagement by limiting public access to trusted news.

    News Media Association chief executive Owen Meredith said: “The findings of our survey clearly show the huge level of concern from editors about the impact of the tech platforms’ activities on the sustainability of journalism.”

    “The Government must resist pressure from the tech platforms to water down the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Bill and pass this sensible legislation, which will help to level the playing field field between platforms and publishers and spur innovation and competition across the UK digital economy.”

    Katie French, regional group editor at Newsquest, which owns many local newspapers, said: “While tech platforms have greatly enhanced our way of life by allowing unrestricted access to information and increased connection, they have severely impacted the business of news, and news brands such as my own have not been fairly compensated.”

    “My titles have more readers than ever before in their history thanks to the global and national audiences our online content is exposed to.”

    “However, we receive very little in the way of fair remuneration for the rich and high-quality service our content provides even by hosting our content or signposting readers to our stories through search engines.”

    “Our very presence is giving credibility to these platforms that otherwise would be filled with clickbait, nonsense and unregulated information.”

    The BBC’s plans to cut local radio provision and boost its online local news were also criticised, with 86 per cent fearing it will “damage independent local journalism in the UK.”

    Sun editor Victoria Newton told the NMA’s Journalism Matters parliamentary reception on Tuesday: “Original journalism everywhere should be protected, as should the publishers that spend and invest in journalism.”

    “I make a special mention for our vital local newspapers, without whom court cases and local democracy would go unreported.”

    “These outlets should also be protected from the BBC’s expansionist activities, which risk driving them out of the market.”

    A total of 30 editors responded to the online survey, which was carried out between August and September.