Tag: Illegal immigrants

  • 376 illegal immigrants arrested in Ogun

    376 illegal immigrants arrested in Ogun

    334 Camerounians, 27 Ghanaians, 26 Benionise involved

    The Nigeria Immigration Service has arrested 376 illegal immigrants in Ogun State, who are into fraud.

    They were arrested at their hideouts during a raid by officers of the service in the Ogun State Command and Zone A headquarters, in the suburbs of Lambe/Ajuwon Akute Areas of the state, following credible intelligence.

    According to the Comptroller of the state command, Muhammed Akadri, their profiling showed that 334 of them are Cameroonians, 27 Ghanians, one Togolese and 26 Beninoise.

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    He said they are 251 males and 125 females between 25 and 30 years.

    It was also gathered that the foreigners entered the country through unauthorised entry points, and none presented residence cards or any travelling documents after interrogation.

    Akadri also said the Comptroller-General of Immigration Service, Kemi Nanna Nandap, had ordered their repatriation.

  • Fed Govt to clamp down on illegal immigrants

    THE Federal Government yesterday said it would soon clamp down on illegal immigrants in the country.

    It followed the deportation of 723 Nigerians by the Ghana Immigration Service.

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola, who stated this in Lagos at the BRF Gabfest, lamented inhuman treatment of Nigerians abroad.

    According to him, the country also has extant laws to deport illegal immigrants.

    The event, tagged BRF2GABFEST, second edition, was organised by some youth groups to celebrate Fashola.

    It is themed: “Where are the jobs”.

    The minister said there is a current audit of workers on so many construction sites in the country to ascertain how many Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) citizens, who are working on the sites. He noted that even though they do not need a visa to come into the country but they need a work permit.

    Fashola said: “But you heard that Ghana deported some Nigerians. It is the right that every country has, but it is a right we have never exercised but we are going to exercise it now. It is just the law; every foreigner who has legitimate papers to come to Nigeria is welcome. If you want to work in Nigeria, the same regulation that applies in your country that you must get a work permit applies to you here also.

    “If you don’t have a work permit here and you are in my site, I will take you out. That is already happening. I refused to approve payment for one consultant two months ago because I said I wanted to see his work permit and make sure it was valid for the period the job was done and thankfully, he produced it and he was paid. These are the policies about jobs and employment that are put in place by the President Muhammadu Buhari’s government.”

    He said the issue of job creation in the country was hampered by policies enunciated by the previous administration.

    On job creation strategy of the present administration, he said the President has issued an Executive Order known as Executive Order 5.

    “What Executive Order 5 seeks to achieve is that anytime our economy produces opportunity, we must ensure that if Nigerians are able to do that job, we should give them preference,” he said.

     

     

     

  • Deportation: FG vows to clamp down on illegal immigrants

    Following the deportation of 723 Nigerians by the Ghana Immigration Service, the Federal Government on Thursday said it would soon clamp down on illegal immigrants in the country.

    The Minister of Power, Works and Housing Mr. Babatunde Fashola who said this in Lagos at the BRF Gabfest, lamented the inhuman treatment of Nigerians abroad.

    According to him, the country also has extant laws to deport illegal immigrants in the country.

    The event, tagged BRF2GABFEST, second edition, was organised by some youth groups to celebrate Fashola.

    It is themed, ’Where are the jobs?’

    The minister said there is a current audit of workers on so many construction sites in the country to ascertain how many ECOWAS citizens are working in the sites, noting that even though they do not need a visa to come into the country but they need a work permit.

    Fashola said: “But you heard that Ghana deported some Nigerians. It is the right that every country has but it is a right we have never exercised but we are going to exercise it now.

    “It is just the law, every foreigner who has legitimate papers to come to Nigeria is welcome.

    “If you want to work in Nigeria the same regulation that applies in your country that you must get a work permit applies to you here also.”

    Read Also: Lagos CP warns ballot box snatchers, others

    He added: ‘’If you don’t have a work permit here and you are in my site, I will take you out. That is already happening I refused to approve payment for one consultant two months ago because I said I wanted to see his work permit and make sure it was valid for the period the job was done and thankfully he produced it and he was paid.

    “These are the policies about of jobs and employment that are in place by the President Muhammadu Buhari’s government.’’

    He said the issue of job creation in the country was hampered by policies enunciated by the previous administration.

    On job creation strategy of the present administration, he said the president has issued an Executive Order known as Executive Order 5.

    “What Executive Order 5 seeks to achieve is that anytime our economy produces opportunity, we must ensure that if Nigerians are able to do that job we should give them preference,” he said.

    Fashola noted after about 300 found themselves in difficult business terrain owing banks over N5 trillion, the government then bailed the banks out with N5 trillion in order not bring the country’s banking system down and collapse the economy.

    He explained the lesson from that experience informed why the Buhari-led government decided to support people at the base of the pyramid by starting with social intervention funds to cushion poverty and established N-power and School Feeding Programme for over nine million children, among others.

    Fashola said the programmes had overtime created linkage support for farmers producing the foodstuff needed to keep the programme going.

  • Immigration arrests illegal immigrants heading for Ekiti

    Illegal immigrants numbering over 100 who were allegedly travelling to Ekiti ahead of next week’s governorship election were yesterday intercepted by officers of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), in Lokoja, Kogi State.

    Unconfirmed sources said that the aliens were intercepted at Banda in Kogi State on Tuesday night by the Navy.

    A source at the Kogi State Command of the NIS disclosed that the Navy handed them over to the NIS yesterday.

    The source, who craved anonymity, said some of those arrested confessed that they were headed for Ekiti to vote.

    They allegedly displayed their voters cards.

    Others however claimed that they are traders, and were on their way to Okene.

    Those intercepted comprised mainly of women and children  being conveyed in three trucks.

    When The Nation visited the NIS office, their officers said that those intercepted were being interrogated.

    The NIS Kogi Command Public Relations Officer,  Olasunkami Salami, said they were still profiling the illegal immigrants to know where they were coming from and where they were heading for.

  • Tunisian migrant boat accident: Death toll rises to 112

    The number of illegal immigrants killed after their boat sank off the southeastern coast of Tunisia on Sunday has risen to 112, according to the UNs’ migration agency.

    The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) updated the death toll on its Twitter account on Tuesday.

    The ill-fated boat was packed with about 180 migrants, including 80 from other African countries, local media had reported earlier.

    A total of 68 illegal immigrants — 60 Tunisians and eight foreigners — were rescued by the coastguard.

    The spokesman of the Interior Ministry, Khalifa Chibani, said on Monday that Tunisian security forces intercepted eight individuals involved in planning the case off the island of Kerkennah on Saturday evening.

    Tunisia has become an important new route for migrants trying to reach Europe in the past year, and Kerkennah is known as one of the main illegal gateways.

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    According to IOM, since the beginning of this year, about 1,910 Tunisian migrants have reached Italy by sea.

    The Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights said in a study that 9,329 Tunisians attempted to cross the Mediterranean in 2017, with 34 per cent intercepted by Tunisian maritime forces.

    So far, no less than 900 illegal immigrants have been prevented from crossing Tunisian maritime borders since the beginning of this year’s Ramadan, which began on May 17, according to the Interior Ministry

  • Tunisia migrant death toll rises to 48 – Defence Ministry

    The number of illegal immigrants killed after their boat sank off the southeastern coast of Tunisia on Sunday has risen to 48, according to the Ministry of Defence.

    A total of 75 people have been rescued people so far, including 60 Tunisians, five from Sub-Saharan Africa, two Moroccans and one Libyan, said Rachid Bouhawala, the press officer at the Ministry of Defence.

    Relief operations are continuing in coordination with the army as well as units of the Maritime Guard and civil protection.

    No fewer than 180 illegal immigrants were aboard the boat stranded off the island of Kerkennah on the southeastern coast of the country, including 80 African nationalities.

    Read Also: 124 illegal immigrants repatriated from Libya – Official

    Kerkennah is known as one of the main illegal gateways to Europe from Tunisia.

    Since the beginning of this year, about 1,910 Tunisian migrants have reached Italy by sea, according to the International Organisation for Migration.

    The Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights said in a study that 9,329 Tunisians attempted to cross the Mediterranean in 2017, with 34 per cent intercepted by Tunisian maritime forces.

  • Libya deports 221 illegal immigrants

    The Libyan authorities have deported 221 illegal immigrants from African and Asian countries as part of the immigration department’s voluntary return programme.

    The department said in the statement that 163 Somali nationals had left for their home country on an airplane of local airliner Al-Buraq.

    The department said the deportation was in cooperation with the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

    “This is the first direct flight to leave Tripoli’s M’etiga international airport to the Somali capital Mogadishu,” the department said.

    In addition, the department said, 30 migrants from Bangladesh and 28 from Pakistan were sent to their countries of origin.

    Libya has become a preferred point of departure for immigrants hoping to reach Europe after domestic conflicts erupted in the North African country in 2011.

    The voluntary return program is carried out by the IOM in Libya to help illegal immigrants stranded in Libya return to their countries of origin.

    Some 20,000 illegal immigrants returned home via the program in 2017.

    NAN

  • Three Nigerians, four others jailed in UK over fake ID documents for illegal immigrants

    Three Nigerians, four others jailed in UK over fake ID documents for illegal immigrants

    Seven men, three of whom are Nigerians, have been jailed in the United Kingdom for counterfeiting the British passport and allied identity documents to help immigration offenders live illegally in the country.

    The jailed Nigerians are Abdul Azeeza, Alfred Adekoya and Victor Ariyo.

    Abdul Azeeza,58, who claimed to be  an ex-professional footballer  was sentenced to four years’ imprisonment by the Woolwich Crown Court which heard  that “it was at his address” that the factory producing the false documents was found.

    He was found with a false passport in his back pocket, a residency card in his wallet and “all the implements of making them on the kitchen table.”

    Alfred Adekoya of Kingslake Street, London was sentenced to 40 months and two weeks in custody after pleading guilty to conspiracy to manufacture a fake document.

    Adekoya, 47, had been seen frequenting Azeeza’s address and was found with three counterfeit British passports on his arrest.

    Victor Ariyo of Rye Hill Park London, acted as a go-between for gang leader Steven Kanaventi, 39,and Adekoya, the court heard.

    In a police interview Ariyo, 53, said he was a go-between for “a spiritual service and that is why money passed through his account”.

    But he admitted conspiracy to manufacture a fake document and money laundering, and was sentenced to three years in custody.

    Luke Nkanta, who acted as a courier, was sentenced to 16 months imprisonment after pleading guilty to possession of an identity document with improper intention.

    The court heard that in June 2017 Nkanta, 29, met Adekoya outside the Coral bookmakers in Woolwich, east London.

    When Nkanta, of Wordsworth House, Woolwich, was searched shortly afterwards, officers found a counterfeit passport, an order sheet for the passport and a copy of the photograph used in the document. Gang leader Kanaventi was sentenced to 40 months and two weeks in prison.

    An undercover police officer had placed orders with him in June 2016.

    Prosecutor Lisa Hancox told the court: “Steven Kanaventi is the person who was at the coal face of taking orders and money and then the chain ran from there.”

    Kanaventi of Mulliner Street Coventry, supplied the officer with a string of fake documents, including three passports for £800 each, a British residency permit for £600 and a university degree certificate for £200.

    She said that in one conversation with the officer, “Steven Kanaventi said he would offer £100 for each new customer that the undercover officer supplied”.

    But the documents were not foolproof and the gang’s capability to provide false ID was “exaggerated”.

    When a degree from the University of Liverpool was requested, the criminal organisation offered one from the University of London, and eventually supplied a fake certificate from a separate university entirely.

    In sentencing Kanaventi, Judge Brendan Finucane said he “had a very significant role in this enterprise”, as a result of being partly responsible for ordering, supplying and delivering the false documents.

    Kanaventi pleaded guilty to conspiracy to manufacture a fake document, after the investigation led by the Immigration Enforcement Criminal and Financial Investigation (CFI) team unravelled the operation.

    From late 2015 to June 2017, officers unravelled the wide-scale manufacture and distribution of counterfeit documents by a London and Midlands gang who created the fake IDs to help immigration offenders live illegally in the UK.

    Some of the items needed to make fake documents, including specially adapted tools for dismantling passports, threads for stitching, paint thinners and laminate, were found at his home in Missenden, Inville Road, south London.

    Azeeza pleaded guilty to two counts of possessing an identity document with improper intent and possessing equipment with the intention of making fake documents.

    Paul Kanaventi, 37, of Forster Street, Nottingham, pleaded guilty to converting criminal property after he allowed Steven Kanaventi to use his bank account, and set up an email address in his name, and was jailed for nine months.

    He said he did not know that the money going through the bank account was being used for criminal purposes, but admitted suspecting it.

    Madalitso Majawa, 33, of Ombersley Close, Redditch, was sentenced to six months imprisonment after pleading guilty to possession of an identity document with improper intent.

     

  • UN repatriated 19,370 illegal immigrants from Libya in 2017

    UN repatriated 19,370 illegal immigrants from Libya in 2017

    The UN International Organisation for Migration (IOM) has repatriated  19,370 illegal immigrants from Libya in 2017, an IOM official said yesterday.

    “The programme helped 19,370 illegal immigrants return to their countries of origin in 2017 by airlifting them to the capitals of those countries,” Juma Ben-Hassan, coordinator of the IOM Voluntary Return Program in Libya, told Xinhua.

    “The immigrants assisted by the organization to return to their countries are of 27 African and Asian nationalities,” Ben-Hassan added.

    The IOM and the Libyan authorities launched a humanitarian repatriation program to return immigrants detained in Libyan shelters to their countries of origin.

    Libya, which suffers insecurity and chaos, is a major departure point for illegal immigrants hoping to cross the Mediterranean toward European shores.

    Immigration officials said the number of illegal immigrants in Libya currently reaches 700,000.

    In 2006, the IOM and the Libyan authorities launched a humanitarian program to repatriate immigrants stranded in Libyan shelters to their own countries.

    Libya has become a preferred departure point for illegal immigrants hoping to cross the Mediterranean into Europe, because of insecurity and chaos in the North African country following the 2011 uprising that toppled former leader Muammar Gaddafi.

  • Saudi Arabia deports 198 Nigerian illegal immigrants

    The Federal Government yesterday received 198 Nigerians illegally residing in Saudi Arabia at the Malam Aminu Kano International Airport.

    They are part of the 1,800 Nigerians said to be living illegally in Saudi Arabia but now given amnesty to return home.

    According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), the 198 persons including women and children returned with their luggage on board a Med-View aircraft.

    Officials of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) in Kano received the first batch of the returnees. Mohammed Yahaya-Sani, the Consular at the Nigerian Consulate in Jedda, Saudi Arabia, who led the illegal immigrants, told journalists at the airport that the Federal Government sponsored their return.

    According to him, the illegal migrants voluntarily reported to the Nigerian Embassy to be returned to Nigeria in compliance with the three months evacuation notice issued to them by Saudi authorities, which will expire on July 24.

    Yahaya-Sani said that contrary to speculations, the returnees were not deported rather they voluntarily accepted the amnesty offer granted them by the Saudi authorities for illegal immigrants to leave the country.

    “They decided on their own to return to Nigeria. The Saudi authorities offered amnesty to all illegal immigrants to leave the country within three months,” he said.

    The official handed over the returnees to NEMA officials at the airport who witnessed and documented their returns before they later departed to their various towns and villages.