THISDAY

Nigerians to Pay More for Non-immigrant US Visas from August 29

- Bennett Oghifo in Lagos and Adedayo Akinwale in Abuja

Barely a week after 80 Nigerians were charged with conspiracy to commit fraud, conspiracy to launder money and aggravated identity theft, the United States government has said that effective from August 29, 2019, Nigerian citizens would be required to pay a visa issuance fee, or reciprocit­y fee, for all approved applicatio­ns for non-immigrant visas

The US Mission in Nigeria in a statement issued yesterday said that the reciprocit­y fee would be charged in addition to the nonimmigra­nt visa applicatio­n fee, also known as the MRV fee, which all applicants pay at the time of applicatio­n.

The US explained that Nigerian citizens whose applicatio­ns for a non-immigrant visa are denied would not be charged the new reciprocit­y fee, while both reciprocit­y and MRV fees are non-refundable, and their amounts vary based on visa classifica­tion.

According to the statement, “ffective worldwide on 29 August, Nigerian citizens will be required to pay a visa issuance fee, or reciprocit­y fee, for all approved applicatio­ns for non-immigrant visas in B, F, H1B, I, L, and R visa classifica­tions.’’

The US explained that the reciprocit­y fee would be required for all Nigerian citizens worldwide, regardless of where they are applying for a non-immigrant visa to the United States.

The US added that the reciprocit­y fee is required for each visa that is issued, which means both adults and minors whose visa applicatio­ns are approved would be charged the reciprocit­y fee.

The US said that the fee could only be paid at the US Embassy or the US Consulate General, stressing that the reciprocit­y fee cannot be paid at banks or any other location.

The statement said, “US law requires US visa fees and validity periods to be based on the treatment afforded to US citizens by foreign government­s, insofar as possible.

‘’Visa issuance fees are implemente­d under the principle of reciprocit­y: when a foreign government imposes additional visa fees on US citizens, the United States will impose reciprocal fees on citizens of that country for similar types of visas.

‘’Nationals of a number of countries worldwide are currently required to pay this type of fee after their non-immigrant visa applicatio­n is approved.

“The total cost for a US citizen to obtain a visa to Nigeria is currently higher than the total cost for a Nigerian to obtain a comparable visa to the United States. The new reciprocit­y fee for Nigerian citizens is meant to eliminate that cost difference.”

The statement noted that since early 2018, the US government has engaged the Nigerian government to request that the Nigerian government change the fees charged to US citizens for certain visa categories.

It said after 18 months of review and consultati­ons, the government of Nigeria has not changed its fee structure for US citizen visa applicants, requiring the US Department of State to enact new reciprocit­y fees in accordance with its visa laws.

The US noted that the complete reciprocit­y fee schedule, organised by visa classifica­tion, included B1- $110, B2-$110, B2/B2-$110, while F1-$110, F2-$110, H1B-$180, H4-$180, I-$210, L1-$303, L2-$303, R1-$80, and R2-$80.

It added that the reciprocit­y tables displayed on travel.state.gov would be updated to reflect the changes above.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria