Visitors outside West African countries will have to pay $2,000 if they want to stay in Nigeria beyond 180 days as a penalty fee, the Nigerian immigration has announced.
While meeting with all the heads of commands and formations of the Nigerian Immigration Service at their headquarters in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja, Newly appointed Comptroller General of Nigerian Immigration, Martins Kure Abeshi, has announced that visitors outside West African countries will have to pay $2,000 if they want to stay in Nigeria beyond 180 days as a penalty fee.
According to PM News, the meeting was attended by 5 Deputy Comptrollers Generals, 29 Assistant Comptrollers Generals and 56 Comptrollers.
Chukwuemeka Obua, the service Public Relations Officer, in a statement he issued, revealed that the new charges is part of a series of reforms that the NIS boss is working on to re-position the service.
Reforms proposed includes; deepening of internal control/monitoring, border security and patrol as well as engagement with critical stakeholders of the NIS with the purpose of evolving what he described as “Citizen Inclusive Immigration Service".
He stated that the reform in border security will require a revitalization and reinvigoration of the moribund Air Border Patrol Unit of the NIS.
The Comptroller addressed the issue of extortion, touting and general staff indiscipline, saying it would be curbed because of concrete plans to focus on the welfare of officers of the NIS. He assured them that the NIS under his watch would address the high rate of human trafficking in Nigeria, even as he directed all heads of formations to put in more efforts to nick the practice in the bud.
He then revealed that the NIS would soon introduce the e-pass project under the Trusted Travellers Scheme (TTS). According to him, when the project takes off, all non ECOWAS visitors to Nigeria who intend to stay in excess of 56 days would be required to register and pay a fee equivalent of $200 while those who over stay their visitors passes in excess of between 90-180 days would pay a penalty of an equivalent of $1000. Those who over stay in excess of 180 days would be required to pay a penalty of equivalent $2000.