Article Summary
- The Minister of Interior said corrupt officials are undermining the efforts of the Service to speed up international passport issuance.
- He also said that the NIS has never experienced a shortage of passport booklets.
- The Minister appealed to Nigerians to stop patronising the touts and report any NIS officials manipulating applicants for money.
The Federal Government has said that the efforts of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) at sanitising the process and bringing integrity to passports application are being sabotaged by a ‘few’ corrupt officials of the NIS.
The Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, stated this in Oyo Town while inaugurating the NIS passports front office in the town on Tuesday evening.
This is coming less than 24 hours after the Senate ordered a probe into the operations of the NIS to unravel why there have been delays in the issuance and renewal of international passports.
The minister said that NIS did not, at any given time, experience a shortage of passport booklets, adding it was “a lie and an excuse by few corrupt officials of the service to extort the applicants”.
Corrupt officials are the issue
Explaining why there have been delays in the process of issuing the Nigerian passport, Aregbesola said:
- “One of the challenges facing NIS as regards passports application are the few corrupt officials of the service who are undermining the efforts of the service at sanitising process and bringing integrity to passports application.
- “These unscrupulous people are making the situation difficult by the day, if people did not tolerate them, they will not exist again. They are the one spreading the rumour that there are no booklets in order to continue to extort the applicants.
- “We did not have a shortage of booklets at any given time; we have enough booklets to meet the need of the people. There are more than enough booklets in our production schedule.”
He, however, appealed to Nigerians to stop patronising the touts and report any NIS officials manipulating applicants for money. The minister said that NIS has been improving its services, noting that only a few countries could boast of the type of Nigeria passport, which he said “is one of the best in the world”.
He said that the challenges currently facing immigration service included a dearth of offices to enrol applicants for data capturing. The minister said that the challenges were gradually been tackled, especially with the construction of more passport front offices.
Reducing congesting
Aregbesola said the inauguration of a new office in Oyo Town would reduce the congestion in the Ibadan centre. He said that about 5,000 applicants waiting for data capturing in Ibadan centre would be offloaded to the new centre in Oyo, to reduce the challenge of waiting period of data capturing by applicants.
- “There is a limit to the number of applicants any passport office can attend to in a day, thus making it impossible to urgently attend to all the applicants necessitating the long waiting period.
- “Ibadan can only attend to 450 applicants in a day and that is why we need several locations like this one in Oyo,” he said.
The minister said that getting an international passport was the right of all Nigerians in Nigeria and those outside the country, assuring them that the service would not relent in its mandate of providing passports to all Nigerians.
Earlier, the NIS Comptroller in Oyo State, Mohammed Umar, said the new passport office would be an additional centre to that of Ibadan Centre, which had been serving people of the state and its environs for decades.
Senate’s probe
Meanwhile, the Senate has launched an investigation into the operations of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) over the incessant complaints by Nigerians of delay in the issuance and renewal of international passports.
The upper legislative chamber on Tuesday mandated its committee on Interior to urgently commence the investigation and turn in its report of the investigation in two weeks.
The Senate resolution was a sequel to the adoption of a motion on the matter at Plenary. The motion was sponsored by Sen. Uche Ekwunife (PDP-Anambra).