It
is no longer news that the U.K's Home Secretary is initiating a pilot
scheme where citizens from certain "high risk" countries, including
Nigeria, pay £3,000 as a surety bond before being allowed entry to
Britain.
British Home
Secretary, Theresa May was quoted by the media as saying that Prime
Minister David Cameron’s Conservative Party is serious about cutting
immigration and abuses of the system.
“This is the next step in
making sure our immigration system is more selective, bringing down net
migration from the hundreds of thousands to the tens of thousands,
while still welcoming the brightest and the best to Britain,” May was
quoted as saying.
“In the long run, we’re interested in a
system of bonds that deters overstaying and recovers costs if a foreign
national has used our public services,” she added.
A Home Office official said the six countries highlighted were those with “the most significant risk of abuse.”
Reacting to the development, Chairman, House of Representatives’
Committee on Diaspora Affairs, Abike Dabiri-Erewa said that Nigeria
could retaliate.
She said: “I have not studied the new policy
and I don’t understand what they (UK) classified as high risk. However,
if indeed all this is true, the principle of reciprocity should apply.
You can recall there was a time South Africa had some policy for
Nigerians, when the then Ambassador Mohamed Marwa introduced same to
South Africans coming to Nigeria; they suspended the policy.”
Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Ogbole Amedu Ode
(Deputy Director Communications), when contacted on phone last night
said, “I am sure you know that Nigeria has a mission in the UK. By
tomorrow, I will speak with the Nigerian High Commissioner in London on
the matter first before I can say anything on it.”
In a related
development, bilateral tie between Nigeria and Portugal may soon snap
following outbreak of diplomatic row between both countries.
Barely a week after Nigeria was entangled with the East African country,
Kenya, over “illegal deportation of Nigerians,” the Federal Government
at the weekend refused to accept another Nigerian deported from
Portugal.
The Federal Government had said that the deportation
of the Nigerian, simply identified as Raymond Junior, did not follow due
process.
A Portuguese plane, which registration number could
not be ascertained at press time, had brought Raymond into the country
from Lisbon, Portugal through the cargo session of the Murtala Mohammed
International Airport, MMIA, Lagos.
However, officials of the
Nigerian Immigration Service, NIS, attached to the airport refused to
accept him, citing irregular process.
A source close to the NIS
confided in our correspondent that the officials on duty, after making
phone calls to their boss in Abuja, ordered the plane to return the
deportee to Lisbon and told the pilot and the Portuguese officials to
follow the law on deportation of Nigerian nationals before he could be
accepted into the country.
The source insisted that Portugal
did not file a proper documentation before Raymond was deported,
stressing that Federal Government only asked Portugal to take back the
deportee and comply with international law before bringing him back to
Nigeria.
The same situation is playing out between Nairobi and
Abuja following the deportation of three Nigerians, with the Federal
Government claiming that Kenya flouted all known international laws in
deporting her citizens.
The Kenyan government brought a legislative order from its Minister of Interior to deport foreign nationals.
Media had reported last Thursday of the grounding of a Kenyan plane
with the American registration number 5Y-SAS belonging to Cavok Airlines
in Kenya.
The aircraft, which is still grounded at the
airfield of the Lagos airport, had arrived the country about 6.36pm on
June 3 with 18 passengers, including three deportees from Kenya.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Post your Comments here