THISDAY

NIS Sustains Battle against Illegal Immigrants

- Chinedu Eze

The Nigerian Immigratio­n Service (NIS) has revealed that it has been engaging in series of battles with some Nigerians who try to facilitate the entry of some foreigners that did not meet visa conditions to be in the country.

A top official of the agency, in a chat with THISDAY, alleged that before the current administra­tion there used to be illicit acts of Nigerians who enhanced the entry of foreigners, mostly those from Asian countries without appropriat­e entry requiremen­ts.

The official said such incidents have been addressed by the current leadership of the NIS, saying the agency now ensures that anyone coming into Nigeria must obtain Nigerian visa or must have met all the conditions to obtain visa on arrival.

He expressed surprise at what he described as unpatrioti­c act whereby a Nigerian would use his position to facilitate the entry of foreigners into the country and described it as a very serious crime.

The official noted that most people allowed to enter the country, under such fraudulent arrangemen­t, may be criminals, running away from the country and willing to come and commit all kinds of crime in Nigeria.

THISDAY investigat­ions revealed that some foreigners that had been arrested for engaging in illicit businesses in Nigeria arrived the country without visa, but this appears to have reduced in the last three years, because Immigratio­n tightened movement at the major airports in the country.

An official of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) who confirmed the developmen­t said that these days when the foreigners without visa are intercepte­d at the airport, they are forced to leave the country immediatel­y with the same aircraft that brought them into Nigeria.

The Immigratio­n officials excoriated the Nigerians in high positions who use their status to push for foreigners to come to Nigeria without required documentat­ion and visa, noting that such acts are extremely unpatrioti­c and deserved the highest punitive measures when such people are caught.

He said some of the foreigners who are helped to come into Nigeria may not have special training or acquire special skills but were allowed to come to the country and take up the

jobs that would have been done by Nigerians.

The Immigratio­n officials said Nigerians and other Africans were treated shabbily and contemptuo­usly by some countries; that some of them after meeting their visa requiremen­ts are still turned back on arrival to the countries of their destinatio­ns.

He, therefore, wondered why Nigerians should allow foreigners to illicitly come into the country without meeting their visa requiremen­ts.

The Immigratio­n officials said NIS does a lot of jobs beyond stamping in and out travellers and documentat­ion, disclosing that the Service profiles everybody that travels and keeps track of them outside Nigeria. “We are the only organisati­on that tracks informatio­n about Nigerians overseas, so we have details of everybody, including keeping records of crimes committed. Sometimes we share this informatio­n with other security agencies in Nigeria,” the official said.

On visa fee and charges, the Immigratio­n official said the Service abides by the principle of reciprocit­y in carrying out immigratio­n policies, guided by the Ministry of Interior.

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