Tag: immigration

  • My Husband Knows how to cool me down whenever i am taking things too hot-Retired Asst Comptroller General of Immigration Odubela-Aduroja

    My Husband Knows how to cool me down whenever i am taking things too hot-Retired Asst Comptroller General of Immigration Odubela-Aduroja

    Retired Assistant Comptroller General of Immigration, Mrs Funmilayo Odubela-Aduroja, in this interview with KUNLE AKINRINADE, shares a riveting story about her childhood, career, lifestyle and opinion on national security. 

    At 65, Mrs Funmilayo Odubela-Aduroja’s physique bellies her age. She walked briskly and flashed winsome smile at staff members of the prestigious Ikoyi Club 1938, Lagos, as she led the reporter to the swimming pool side section of the exclusive club on Tuesday.

    The Ijebu Ode-born former Assistant Comptroller General of Immigration clutched two bags that drew the curiosity of her interviewer.”Oh, you are glancing at my bags? I have got loads of documents and books there. May be I didn’t tell you that I am a voracious reader, especially when it comes to biographies. I have read quite a number of books about great men such as former President Bill Clinton; his wife Hillary; Nelson Mandela and General Collins Powell, a former chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff of US, whose family migrated from Jamaica to the United States. If I read, write and get tired, I would come to this club to swim for many hours until I am satisfied.”

    Where does her strength lie to do so many things? “I am the only daughter in the family but I was not over-pampered. My mother was a disciplinarian and she ensured that I carried out domestic tasks and chores. She was a food vendor and I had to wake up early enough to help her out in her business. I was raised to be up and doing and there was no time for pampering at all. Working hard has become part of me; despite my age, I still don’t like to idle away.”

    A peep into one of the bags revealed one of the books she is currently reading, a book on 9/11 terror attack on the World Trade Center, US, by Islamic militant group, Al-Qaida. She would later reveal that her fancy with books was caused by her mother, who made it a duty to instill discipline in her, in her early years.

    “I was a tomboy in my childhood, I have two elder brothers and I am the only girl of the family. And that is why I am usually free with men. In fact, I was happy to hear from your editor that a male reporter would be coming to interview me. However, my mother was responsible for my fascination with books and it was because I was so stubborn she thought I might not face my studies. All the time she kept advising me to face my studies and get educated so that I can become rich in life. She was a food vendor in Yaba, Lagos, where we lived and we had neighbours such as the former deputy governor of Lagos State, Alhaja Sinatu Ojikutu, and her husband and renowned novelist, Buchi Emecheta. She would point at the Ojikutus and admonished me to face my studies in order to live the good life that the    couple had. Mrs Ojikutu had a Volkswagen Beetle car, while her husband cruised in a Peugeout 404 car.

    “My father was a casket maker at Sabo, Yaba, and people used to call us Omo Baba Oniposi (children of a casket maker); I lost him when I was just three years old. My mother was a disciplinarian and she subjected me to rigorous upbringing by registering me at the British Council Library opposite Casino Cinema, which was stone’s throw to our house and I had a planned timetable that I followed religiously. I would finish up my housework by 2pm and go to the library 4pm and would not return home until 8pm when the library closed. I decided not to disappoint my mother by facing my studies and that accounts for why I am a voracious reader to date. My strict upbringing has also made me to be time conscious; I can’t come late to work or for an appointment.”

    Giving a graphic account of her childhood, she disclosed that she was heady and full of pranks.” I used to be loquacious because I was an extrovert right from my school days in Our Lady of Apostle Primary School and the secondary school in Yaba, Lagos. I used to be reprimanded by my teachers for talking too much. I recall that in my Primary 4, I was too troublesome, to the extent that I was asked to bring my mother to school. The teachers told my mother that I was too stubborn and always making trouble and that report earned me a lot of beating from my mother because she was very upset with me.

    “In another instance, I was asked to bring my mother to school again but I pulled a fast one on my teachers. Instead of bringing my mother, I wrote a note and presented it to my teachers as if it was my mother that wrote it. The letter read:

    ”Dear Teacher, I am very sorry that you said I should come with my daughter to school. I just got a letter from home that my mother is sick and I am travelling to Ijebu now. When I come back I will come and see you. Thank you very much.” I was just laughing in my mind when my teacher accepted the letter. However, I had pleaded with one of my brothers before writing the letter in my own little English.

    “When I was in Form Four in my secondary school, I was rude to one of my teachers who was always criticising students. I rebuked her for abusing us instead of correcting our mistakes and I was again asked to bring my mother to school. Again, I connived with one of my brothers to present a fake note from my mother to my teacher.

    The note written by my brother read:”I am not happy with my daughter’s conduct, her performance was actually discouraging. However, I will make sure I see you, but presently I am travelling out of Lagos.”

    If her elementary and secondary school years were full of troubles, her university days were no less. This she said was because”I was among the first set of students admitted to the University of Benin (UNIBEN) in 1970. Some of us who came from Lagos became objects of bugging from some students because of our stylish dressing. So I walked up to one of those behind the bugging and warned him to stop forthwith or be prepared for my trouble. I made him to realise that I am from Lagos and that we abhorred slackness. I later heard that the concerned students were planning to lay ambush for us but I still continued to give them trouble.

    “Sometime in 2002, I ran into one of my schoolmates while on a trip to Lokoja and he asked me if I was still troublesome. Although I was embarrassed by his question but told him that age has completely erased those things from me.”

    With her stubbornness and pranks, how come she chose to work in a para-military agency that required a lot of self-discipline?, the reporter asked.

    Hear her:” Like I told you, I grew up among men; I mean my brothers and their influence was my greatest motivating factor. My eldest brother, Neye Odubela, joined the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), while my immediate elder brother, Yemi Odubela, joined the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) and once served as the Lagos State Commissioner of Police before he retired a few years ago. So growing up among the duo in a way influenced the choice of my career and I did not have any reservation when the opportunity to join the Immigration Service beckoned after my graduation in 1974.”

    She explained that her path crossed with that of her husband in the course of her early years in immigration service. She attributed their meeting to fate, saying: “My husband complements me a lot. I am an extrovert, while he is an introvert. We met while I was a young immigration officer and he was an officer in the State Security Service, where he served for 18 years before he ventured into agro-business. My husband has been my pillar of support; he is unassuming, very caring and supportive. He is from Ilesha, while I hail from Ijebu Ode; he knows how to cool me down whenever I am taking things too hot. Even though I compounded my name because I believe that there are a lot of things attached to my father’s name but whenever my husband wants to write my names on a cheque, he normally stylishly avoids mentioning Odubela by writing ‘Funmi O Aduroja’.”

    The mother of three, all boys, explained that she had no regret not having a female child, despite the prompting of her husband after their last child was born.

    “Regret ke? I lost hope about having a daughter after I had my last son and I have no regret at all. I did not go for scanning when I was pregnant with my last son, I thought I would have a girl child and I was buying pink clothes and other baby items which is generally accepted as girl’s colour. At last, I was disappointed when the baby turned out to be a boy. A few years later, my husband asked that we take another shot at childbirth because he said he wanted me to have a daughter but I told him I was too old to have another child.”

    Popularly called ‘Iron Lady’ in immigration service because of her workaholic and disciplinary comportment, Odubela-Aduroja, who retired in 2010, recapped her years in service with a sense of pride.

    “I was the first female Controller of Immigration in Ogun State and the Muritala International Airport, Lagos, and retired as Assistant Comptroller General of Immigration in charge of Zone ‘F’, which comprises Oyo, Ogun, Osun, Ondo and Ekiti States. I was nicknamed ‘Iron Lady’ by younger colleagues because I was a tough and no-nonsense officer. I was so much engrossed with my work that my busy schedule took toll on my children. I was invited on a number of occasions by some of their teachers because of their failings in school work.

    “For example, in 2002, one of the teachers of my last son, Tosin, asked me to come to his school in respect of her poor attitude to school work. I was told that he was lazy and was avoiding his assignments in school. On getting to his school, I quickly struck a deal with the principal to call the assembly so that I can beat Tosin in the presence of his schoolmates. On hearing that, Tosin started begging me with a promise to be serious with his studies and that was how he subsequently put up brilliant academic performances till he finished from the school. But then, I felt guilty that I had not been there for him and his brothers owing to the demanding nature of my job. Interestingly, Tosin and his two elder brothers, Deji and Seun, later read computer-related courses in the university. My eldest son, Deji studied Computer Science and Electronic Engineering while Seun and Tosin read Computer Science and Computer Engineering respectively and they are doing well for themselves.”

    She described her style as simple, saying: “I have been living a moderate lifestyle; I am not a party freak and I don’t wear expensive dresses. You cannot catch me with expensive clothes and as a principle, I don’t buy aso ebi (uniformed dress for outing).I buy relatively cheap jewelry that would even put off thieves or make them regret stealing from me. I like being simple at all times and this accounts for why I don’t give out aso ebi when I organise any party. Instead, I ask invitees to turn out in specific colours of their own choice.”

    Before the interview wound up, she did not fail to touch on the challenges facing the security of the nation and the need for proactive measures to tackle the festering challenges militating against Nigeria’s internal security.

    Hear her: “There is Boko Haram; deadly activities of cattle rustlers, oil pipeline vandals, kidnappings, communal clashes and attacks by herdsmen on innocent people in villages across the states of the federation. The army, which has a constitutional mandate to defend the country against external aggression, has now been saddled with securing pipelines and chasing cattle rustlers, fiendish herdsmen and Boko Haram insurgents. This means that the army is being overstretched instead of being allowed to face its primary responsibility of securing the country from external threats. Therefore, there is need for the establishment of national guards to curb internal threats to security of lives and property. The creation of National Guard will also help secure our waters from sea pirates while the land and the air will be protected.

    “In 2003, while I was studying at the National Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS), I read a book: “9/11 Commission Report”, published by the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States. On page 366 of the book, Nigeria and Mali were cited as the countries in West Africa where terrorists may find a safe haven. I was deeply touched and I ordered for over 30 copies of the book, which I gave to top government functionaries, including former President Olusegun Obasanjo; the late President Umaru Yar’Adua; former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon Dimeji Bankole; former Ogun State governor, Otunba Gbenga Daniel, among others. I was, however, surprised when the late National Security Adviser(NSA), General Patrick Azazi, said that the Boko Haram insurgency took the Federal Government by surprise. That means the country did not do anything about the matter for six years until Boko Haram became a national problem in 2009.

    At a point, the embassy of the United States in Nigeria asked me why I was importing the book and I explained that I wanted the Nigerian authorities to be acquainted with the problems that may likely confront the nation soon.”

    Odubela-Aduroja, who is now a border security expert, said the insurgency thrives because we have porous borders, urging the Federal Government to establish a Ministry of Homeland Security to secure the country from lawlessness.

    “The porous nature of Nigerian borders calls for serious concern and all kinds of foreigners are cashing in on that to move into the country to carry out their nefarious activities unchecked. Yet, the Nigerian authorities are not doing enough to checkmate the unpleasant situation at our borders.The current refugee crisis in Syria is affecting European countries such as Hungary, Germany and Europe cannot cope with it. As we speak, Hungary is fencing her borders to prevent the influx of Syrian refugees into her territory.

    During the first anniversary of the 9/11 terrorists attack in US, the then Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, said that United States of America had firmly secured her borders, water and airspace against threats by terrorists and that is what I want to see in Nigeria too. We must fence our borders to prevent unscrupulous foreigners from gaining access to our territory. As we speak, Nigeria’s cash crops such as cocoa and groundnut are being smuggled to neighbouring countries like Benin Republic and Niger. These countries in turn export the crops and make a lot of money from our collective sweat and the only measure to stop this is to properly fence our borders like US  did to prevent people from her neighbouring countries such as Mexico from coming to her territory through borders.

    “I am also calling for the creation of a Ministry of Homeland Security, where all para-military organisations and agencies, excluding the police, are merged and coordinated to provide maximum internal security for the country. This would make the running of the country even cheaper in the face of a battered economy caused by the crashing prices of crude oil all over the world,” she added.

  • Immigration jobs tragedy: EFCC grills ex-NIS boss

    Immigration jobs tragedy: EFCC grills ex-NIS boss

    Parradang quizzed about N650m fees

    Ex-Minister Moro may face panel

    For about eight hours yesterday, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) operatives quizzed a former Comptroller-General  of Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) Mr. David Parradang.

    He was grilled over alleged N650million fees collected from job seekers last year.

    The EFCC invited Parradang to explain how much was collected and the whereabouts of the funds.

    About 6.5million applied for 5,000 spaces. The conduct of the test in March,  2014 led to the death of 15 applicants. Scores were injured in stampede in Abuja, Port Harcourt, Minna

    Each applicant paid N1,000.

    Although the immediate past Minister of Interior, Comrade Abba Moro, blamed the former Comptroller-General for the incidents, those loyal to Parradang had earlier traced the tragedy to Moro and those they called his business partners.

    The EFCC has stepped into the scandal to ascertain the whereabouts of the N650million.

    The probe is coming barely three weeks after Parradang’s removal by President Muhammadu Buhari for allegedly recruiting over 1,000 officers in May, allegedly without due process.

    A highly-placed source, who spoke in confidence, said: “The ex-Comptroller-General came to the EFCC headquarters at about 10am and as at 6pm, he was yet to leave.

    “Upon arrival, he was ushered into an office to meet with a team of investigators, who insisted on a written statement.

    “Parradang was invited by the EFCC to explain the circumstances behind the fees charged, the law backing it, the account where the money was paid into, what the cash was used for and the balance.

    “This is just the first step in the ongoing probe of the jobs scandal. We are going to invite officials of the Ministry of Interior and the Prison and Immigration Board and the company engaged for the recruitment.

    “ A verification of the company is already done at the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC).

    “We may also interact with Abba Moro if it becomes expedient to do so. But at present, we are grilling Parradang.”

    The source added: “We did not receive any petition from any person or group. This commission went into the case on merit.We have been on it for a while.”

    The Head of Media and Publicity of the EFCC, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, confirmed that Parradang appeared before a team following the ongoing investigation into last year’s immigration recruitment scandal .

    [ad id=”403656″]About two weeks ago,  Moro said Parradang should be held responsible for the job tragedy.

    He said Parradang abandoned the important recruitment for birthday parties in Jos.

    A tragedy that shook the nation

    At least 18 job seekers were on March 16, 2014 confirmed dead nationwide during a rowdy recruitment test conducted by the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS).

    In Abuja, the 60,000 capacity National Stadium was filled up with job applicants desperate to write the recruitment test.

    The examination was believed to have been contracted to a private firm by the NIS, citing the need for transparency and accountability.

    But it turned to tragedy as the NIS could not manage the millions of applicants desperately seeking employment.

    In Abuja, seven applicants (two men and five women) were confirmed dead in a stampede where many others were injured.

    The body count rose in other states where the same tragedy unfolded. In Niger state, a stampede occurred, leading to the death of three of the job seekers as security agencies fired tear gas at applicants.

    About 11,000 candidates had converged on Women Day Secondary School in Minna, when the tragedy occurred.

    At the Port Harcourt Liberation stadium, a pregnant woman was among the five people who died. The pregnant woman was among the 35,000 applicants that thronged the stadium, she was said to have died while attempting to scale a fence. She fell down on her stomach and died on the way to the hospital

    In Osun, Lagos, Gombe, Oyo and Plateau states, thousands of applicants fainted due to exhaustion caused by the large number of people.

    NIS officials said they “were overwhelmed” by the sheer number of applicants who turned up for the recruitment exercise.

    The number of the dead provoked national outrage with many calling for the sack and prosecution of the then Minister for Internal Affairs, Comrade Abba Moro. But the Minister, who accepted responsibility for the tragedy was also quick to blame the victims for being impatient and refusing to follow orders given to them.

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan commiserated with the families of the victims and promised them automatic employment in the NIS for a member of each of the family. He said a fresh recruitment would be conducted.

  • Airlines owe Immigration $1.170m at Lagos airport

    Airlines operating at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos, are owing the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), Airport Command.

    The command said 3,102 Nigerians were deported between January and last month for immigration offences.

    The Comptroller of Immigration, MMIA Command, Mrs. Chizoba Dibi, who addressed reporters in Lagos at the weekend, regretted  the debts, saying efforts to recover them had proved abortive.

    Thirty commercial airlines operate in and out of MMIA daily. This is besides the numerous private aircraft that operate at the terminal.

    She recalled that the former Minister of Interior, Mr. Aba Moro, in two letters dated February 19  and April 26 conveyed approval of the command to withdraw passenger clearance from the highest debtor, to act as a deterrent to other airlines.

    Mrs. Dibi said she hoped that the President Muhammadu Buhari administration would give the same approval to the command to recover its debts.

    As at the end of last month, she said the command processed 665,450 arriving passengers and 755,817  departed through MMIA within the period.

    Mrs. Dibi added that the command refused 353 Nigerians from departing the country. One hundred and forty seven foreigners were disallowed from entering the country.

    The comptroller said 3,102 regular deportee-Nigerians were received within the year and that the command also received 508 special deportees, while five foreigners were deported.

  • Calling new Immigration Chief

    Passing through the Nigeria-Benin Republic boundary in Badagry can be a nightmare for any traveller not familiar with the route.

    Last Tuesday and Thursday was not my first time of travelling to Togo and back by road, but I had expected that the situation would have improved since over four years when I did. But not much has changed.

    What is supposed to be the border post with clear demarcation of buildings and gates is an open land area with all manner of temporary structures occupied by immigration officers on both the Nigerian and Beninoise sides.

    Various barricades, some with ropes, are used by officials to supposedly check entry and exit of persons and vehicles across the two countries. With the lack of necessary infrastructure, what obtains at the border cannot in anyway be said to be thorough.

    The border is so porous that that no matter how hard the immigration officials try, they cannot, given the situation they found themselves working, effectively monitor who comes in or goes out of the country.

    Without any documentation, it is easy for anyone passing through the border to beat the official procedure and pay his or her way through, thanks to touts, especially on the Benin Republic side who are all over the border area.

    While my colleague and I on the trip had our passports stamped without paying any fee on the Nigerian side, we were lured into the Benin side by touts and ended up paying some illegal fees, instead of waiting for our taxi driver to drive us across.

    The touts were obviously working with the connivance of the officials. If not, I don’t understand why they and some corrupt officials should be allowed to exploit innocent persons openly without being called to order.

    Unlike the Nigeria-Benin border, the Benin-Togo boarder is well mapped out with tarred road and buildings for the officials to regulate entry and exit.

    On my return from Togo, I met Nigerian immigration officials operating in temporary shed and dilapidated structures as offices.  I could feel their frustrations about not having a conducive atmosphere to carry out their duties as they manage to work with the limited facilities they have.

    I learnt they have to make do with small generators fuelled by them at night due to lack of electricity supply.

    I notice on-going construction work at the border post, but I am not sure how long it has been on and how soon it will be completed. The border is yet another indication of dilapidation of various facilities in the country begging for attention.

    If we are really serious about ensuring the necessary immigration procedures at our border posts to check mate the influx of illegal persons, there is an urgent need to build the needed structures and properly equip the officials.

    The new immigration chief should make the Badagary border post a priority given the high traffic of persons on the West African route. It is a shame that Togo has a better border security post compared with us.

    Given our size and resources compared with our neighbours, our facilities should be the benchmark for others to emulate.

  • Major shake-up in Immigration as King takes over PR Unit

    The top management of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) yesterday announced a change of guard in its Public Relations Unit.

    In a Staff Posting Order vide NIS/ABJ/1027/VV/T111/562 dated  September,  2015, the incumbent spokesperson of the NIS, Assistant Comptroller CPP Obua has been moved to Lagos Command while Deputy Comptroller, Ekpedeme King has been deployed to replace him as the Service Public Relations Officer.

    According to a statement issued by a Superintendent of Immigration in the

    Public Relations Unit, A.O OKPU: “Until his deployment, DCI King was the second-in-command at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, (MMIA) Ikeja.

    “During his tenure as the Service Public Relations Officer, ACI Chukwuemeka Patrick Obua made some giant strides including the upgrading of the Service’s Newsletter to a full-fledged magazine with legal personality as well as the hosting of the 2014 Comptroller-General’s Conference and Stakeholders Interactive Forum in Commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of the NIS.

    “The Service wishes him well and fondly welcomes DCI Ekpedeme King in his new deployment as the Service Public Relations Officer.”

     

  • FG suspends Immigration boss for recruiting 1,000 workers ‘illegally’

    FG suspends Immigration boss for recruiting 1,000 workers ‘illegally’

    The Comptroller-General of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), Mr. David Parradang,was suspended   from work yesterday over   alleged  recruitment of  1,000 immigration officers by the organization in violation of due process, The Nation can reveal.

    Parradeng was sent home by the federal government  which  also directed the most senior Deputy Comptroller-General of Immigration, Mr. Martin Kure Abeshi, to take over in an acting capacity.

    The  Director of Press, Ministry of Interior, Yusuf Isiaka Alhaji, confirmed the suspension  via a terse statement.

    He said: “The Comptroller-General of the Nigerian Immigration Service, Mr. David Parradang, has been suspended from office with immediate effect.

    “Meanwhile, the Deputy Comptroller-General of Immigration Service, Mr. Martin Kure Abeshi, who is the most senior officer, has been directed to take over the affairs of the office.”

    However,investigation revealed that the suspension was in connection with alleged  “grave error” committed by the NIS in recruiting 1,000 officers.

    A source familiar with the development said  the affected officers  were hired through  a  committee instead of allowing the Customs and Immigration Board to do so.

    Said the presidency source: “The officers were recruited after President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration took over. When the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Interior drew his attention to the violation of due process, he claimed that there was an approval he got from ex-President Goodluck Jonathan.

    “He also insisted that ex-President directed him to use a committee to conduct the recruitment instead of the Customs and Immigration Board. He completely sidelined the board.

    “And when the Permanent Secretary of the Interior Ministry asked him to withdraw the recruitment, he ignored the directive. He said he would  not reverse ex-President Jonathan’s instruction.

    “The Permanent Secretary officially reported the suspended CG to President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “Instead of acting unilaterally, the President insisted on due process. He said the suspended CG should be queried. Upon rendering an unsatisfactory answer, Parradang was suspended.”

    This is the  second  recruitment  scandal  under the administration of Parradang at the NIS.

    The first was the March  2014 death of  20  job applicants at NIS recruitment centres across the country.

    Over 700,000 people applied for advertised vacancies in the organization after paying N1000 each.

    However, pandemonium broke out at the recruitment centres  leaving  the 20 trampled upon.

    Neither Parradang nor the then Minister of Interior, Mr.Abba Moro, was sanctioned by the  Jonathan administration over the incident.

    Besides, the NIS is at the centre of the controversy surrounding the issuance of a Nigerian visa to  the Chief Imam of Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), Ahmed  Al-Assir, by  the Immigration Desk at the nation’s Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon .

    The federal government is said to be utterly embarrassed by the security breach.

    It was learnt that the said visa was issued in a fake Palestinian passport which ought to be detected by the Immigration Service.

    A top source said: “An interim report submitted by the Nigerian Embassy in Lebanon indicated that the visa was issued after the Immigration Service had cleared the ISIS chief.”

    Al-Assir was arrested on August 15 at Beirut’s Rafik Hariri International Airport in Lebanon on his way to Nigeria through Egypt.

    In spite of being on the watch-list of Lebanon’s security services since 2013, Al-Assir was detected, while holding a fake Palestinian passport with a Nigerian visa.

    Prior to his disguise, the Lebanese government had accused him of alleged involvement in the death of 17 Lebanese soldiers.

    He had also been sentenced to death in absentia by a Lebanese court.

    But how he managed  to obtain the  visa  has been creating ripple within the security circle.

  • FG suspends Comptroller-General of Immigration

    FG suspends Comptroller-General of Immigration

    The Federal Government has suspended from office the Comptroller-General of Immigration, Mr David Parradang, with immediate effect.

    This is contained in a statement signed by the Director of Press, Federal Ministry of Interior, Mr Yusuf Isiaka Alhaji, on behalf of the permanent secretary of the ministry, and made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Abuja.

    The statement said the Deputy Comptroller-General of Immigration, Mr Martin Kure Abeshi, had been directed to take over the affairs of the office.

    Abeshi is the most senior officer after Parradang, the statement added

  • Insecurity: Immigration reads riot act to expatriates in Edo

    Insecurity: Immigration reads riot act to expatriates in Edo

    As part of efforts toward effective security of lives and property and preventing terrorist attacks in Edo State, the State Command of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) has read the riot act to expatriates and aliens working in the state.

    The NIS, in the warning, which was also handed to employers of expatriates, vowed to strictly enforce the new Immigration Law of 2015 and punish any expatriates or company that employ them if the law is violated.

    The warning was issued at a stakeholders meeting organised by the NIS, where the aliens and companies were intimated of some of the stiff penalties introduced in the new immigration law.

    Top hierarchy of the NIS present at the meeting frowned at refusal of some companies to pay departure and arrival notification fee of expatriates in the state. Only seven companies were said to be up to date in the payment.

    Assistant-Comptroller General of Immigration, Zone G, Emmanuel Gbuuga, in his speech urged the foreigners to respect Nigeria’s immigration laws just as Nigerians respect other countries’ immigration laws.

    The ACG said it was inappropriate for foreigners to move about the country without carrying their passport, an action he said would no longer be tolerated.

    Emmanuel charged foreigners to always carry their international passports with them and stopped making excuses that their international passports are somewhere in Lagos or Abuja.

    The ACG said the command was not out to embarrass foreigners, but to make them understand the need to obey the laws.

    He warned business owners to only employ documented aliens in the country as a way of boosting security.

    Ogbuuga explained that the command want to know what immigrants are doing across the country as well as monitor their activities.

    “If you have a guest who is a visitor, he has no business to work here. If you want to work, you must make sure you are regularised within three months, if you want to invite an expert, you are given a temporary work permit.”

    “We have a new act that has not been launched. Some of the penalty there are stiff. We are doing it in conformity with other laws. As we respect immigration laws of other countries, we also expect that our laws should be obeyed. I believed that we must operate within the armbit of the laws. Whoever breaks Nigeria laws will pay the penalty.”

    Edo Immigration Comptroller, Alana Olusegun, warned expatriates to pay close attention to sections stipulating new penalties when the new laws are violated.

    According to him, “There is need for anybody who comes into the country to be monitored especially at hotels. We have been asking hotels to render returns on lodgers.

    “Any law made by the service is geared towards security. We want to make expatriates understand the new provisions and new penalties in the Immigration Law. We know why they are here and there is need for us to tell them what awaits anyone that violates the laws.

    “The idea of asking foreigners to pay arrival and notification fee is for security purposes. The hoteliers are not security conscious. You give us information and we work on it. It is a very simple practice.”

  • NIS Recruitment: Applicants to undergo CBT

    NIS Recruitment: Applicants to undergo CBT

    The Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) said Computer-Based Test (CBT) would be used to conduct examinations for applicants of the 2015 recruitment into the service.

    Mr. Chukwuemeka Obua, the Public Relations Officer of the service, said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Wednesday.

    Obua said this was to prevent a reoccurrence of the 2014 recruitment where a stampede was recorded at various centres across the country due to large crowd of applicants.

    He said the CBT would also be used to conduct the examination in order to test the computer literacy level of applicants.

    He said this was a basic requirement for employment into the service.

    “ This is the process that will be adopted for the recruitment in order to prevent the reoccurrence of the past incident. Four or five computer centres will be designated in each state of the federation.

    “ Applicants will be divided according to these centres and they will be communicated online individually the date they are required to sit for the examination and the location in order to prevent over-crowding in centres and cases of non-applicants in attendance,” he said.

    The spokesman said the CBT was a global trend accepted and used worldwide to conduct examinations.

    He said the device was chosen to prevent the rigours associated with paper-based examinations.

    He said that applicants would not be required to bring any writing materials; rather, they would only need their password which was the registration number to log into the computer, answer the test and submit online.

    Obua said after the test, successful applicants would be contacted individually and asked to report to designated immigration offices across the country where they would be further examined.

    “ At this stage, we will do the physical examination to check the height, presence of any physical disabilities and general state of health of applicants to ensure that they are fit to carry out their duties when employed.

    “  Documents of applicants will also be reviewed during the examination after which successful candidates will be contacted online informing them of their acceptance into the service,” he said.

    NAN reports that applications for recruitment into the NIS which commenced on Feb. 9 closed on March 22.

  • Immigration jobs tragedy: One year after

    Immigration jobs tragedy: One year after

    Despite the recent President Jonathan’s fulfilment of job and cash promises made to families of last year’s immigration service job tragedy, Nigerians still wonder why not a single person has been punished nor the report of the senate committee on the tragedy reviewed, even as the tenure of this senate winds to a close. By Assistant Editor, Onyedi Ojiabor, Sanni Onogu and Gbenga Omokhunu in Abuja

    The recent compensation doled out by President Goodluck Jonathan to the members of the families of victims of the March 15, 2014 Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) job stampede may have foreclosed the much expected report of the Senate on the matter. Three days after the incident occurred, the Senator Atiku Bagudu-led Senate Committee on Interior was mandated by the Senate to investigate the immigration jobs screening fiasco. Over a dozen applicants lost their lives during the stampede occasioned by the sheer number of job seekers that thronged the various stadia earmarked for the exercise nationwide. Scores were injured. It is however curious that the report of the Senate committee on the tragic incident laid before the Upper Chamber in May last year  is yet to be considered over a year after the gory tale.

    Expectedly, Nigerians had greeted the sad episode with outrage. Many had called for the sack the Minister of Interior, Abba Moro, for having exposed the level of unemployment in the country, thereby embarrassing the President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration. Similar calls were also made on the Comptroller-General of the NIS, David Parradang. Others had argued that the unfortunate event had put a lie to the fabulous statistics often reeled out by officials on the administration’s job creation efforts. Prominent Nigerians and other groups had called for the outright sack and prosecution of Moro and other government officials that organised the shoddy exercise. Nigerians were further outraged by the fact that each applicant was fleeced to the tune of N1000 before they could be considered eligible for the aptitude test.

    Observers however believe that the non-consideration of the report by the Senate after almost a year of its presentation represents the height of insensitivity on the part of the Nigerian legislature which is supposed to be the “voice of the voiceless.”

    The recent presentation of employment letters and cash gifts to some of the families of the deceased and injured without any measure of punishment for those responsible for the gross abuse of the hapless job seekers by the NIS, they say, is like telling the perpetrators to go and sin no more.

     

    THE TRAGEDY

    The NIS had advertised to recruit young Nigerians and demanded a fee of N1,000 from each of them to be paid into a designated account. The money was received from 710,000 jobless Nigerians for only 4,500 existing vacancies in the Service. The recruitment exercise which was meant to test the mental and physical fitness of the applicants turned disastrous due to shoddy preparation by the handlers. The hapless young Nigerians were made to gather in different stadia across the country under the scorching sun, with officers herding them like sheep while dishing out orders. Out of desperation, stampede ensued in some centres; the weak and tired and pregnant ones were trampled upon. By the time the dust settled, 15 persons had been sent to their untimely graves while scores sustained injuries of various degrees. For instance, the 60,000 seat capacity National Stadium, Abuja, which was one of the venues for the exercise was filled up to about thrice its holding capacity. Ditto for other centers across the country. About 50 applicants in Abuja including pregnant women were injured in the stampede that broke out, as applicants tried to gain entry into the main bowl of the stadium through the one gate designated for the exercise.

    At the Benin centre, the case of late Mrs. Sandra Amu, who was said to be in her early stage of pregnancy, was particularly pathetic. The Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium was parked full with thousands of applicants milling around the main bowl. In line with the directives that they must be on ground as early as 7am on that fateful day, she was said to have arrived the venue very early. But late in the afternoon, the young mother was trampled to death as a result of the uncontrolled human traffic from a desperate and surging crowd of young job seekers.

    The Governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, apparently touched by the plight of the bereaved and injured, had given the widower of the late Mrs. Amu N2million and offered employment to 11 of the 20 who sustained injuries at the Benin centre. The governor also pledged legal assistance to those who may pursue their rights at the courts.

    THE OUTRAGE

    In reaction to the incident, many Nigerians called for the sack of Minister Moro and the CGI of NIS, Parradang. They also requested that the duo should be prosecuted for involuntary homicide over the sham recruitment process that provided avenue for the Ministry of Interior to illegally extort at least N710million from the 710,000 applicants nationwide in compulsory levies.

    Moro somehow stirred the hornets’ nest when in his initial reaction to the incident blamed the applicants for their impatience. “The applicants lost their lives due to impatience; they did not follow the laid down procedures spelt out to them before the exercise. Many of them jumped through the fences of affected centres and did not conduct themselves in an orderly manner to make the exercise a smooth one,” Moro had said.

    He also said he was not going to resign. “The point at which we are now is not about resignation. That time has gone,” Mr. Moro said in response to a question over why he refused to quit despite widespread calls by Nigerians on him to do so. “At the time, I think emotions were very high. I was in the eye of a storm. At that time, a lot of options were on the table. The issue is, do you resign or do you stay to sort out the problem that have been created? ”

    SHOCKING REVELATIONS AT SENATE’S HEARING

    Just like the tales of woe that trailed the NIS job aptitude test, the presentations of the various officials responsible for the exercise before the Senate Committee on Interior painted a picture of lack of coordination and shoddy plans. The Minister of Interior, Moro, apologised to Nigerians over the ill-fated recruitment exercise. He accepted responsibility for the tragedy which he said could have been averted if the exercise had been attended by only those that duly registered for it.

    The NIS boss, Parradang and the Secretary of the Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prisons Services Board (CDFIPB), Mr. Sylvanus Tapgun, told the committee that they were not properly carried along by the Ministry in the planning and execution of the tragic NIS operation. While Parradang claimed that no money was given to the NIS to conduct the aptitude test for the 710,000 applicants by the Ministry, Tapgun said that Drexel Technical Nigeria Limited – the consultant who anchored the application exercise on behalf of the Ministry provided only N45million as “discretionary contribution” for the screening.

    Parradang and a permanent member of the CDFIPB, Mr. Mustapha Zakariya, further claimed that the recruitment exercise was not approved by the board. The NIS boss had specifically faulted the entire exercise and said that he was not carried along in the entire process. He told the committee that he got to know about the date of the exercise on the day the Minister of Interior  appeared before the Committee to defend the 2014 budget of the Ministry.

    Parradang had said: “On September 9, 2013, the Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prison Services Board, placed advertisements in some national dailies for appointments into the Superintendent, Inspectorate and Immigration Assistant cadre signed by the then board Secretary, Dr. Attahiru.

    “I immediately placed a call to the then Secretary that I am not aware that the board met on this issue. I immediately placed a call to the Permanent Secretary too, asking whether there was any decision of the board to place an advert in the newspapers or not.

    “I also placed a call to the two commissioners that are seated before you here today whether they were aware that the board met and agreed for a publication to be made for  recruitment into the Service, but they all answered in the negative.

    “I immediately wrote a letter to the then Secretary of the board in which I expressed my dismay that as a stakeholder and as the head of the NIS, that is supposed to do the recruitment, I was not aware of the exercise.

    “He pleaded with me that I should understand with him that he was under immense pressure to put that advert up. He said I should not write the letter but I said no; this is an official matter and that it is not an issue to do with Parradang but with the NIS.

    “So, I wrote him a letter that I was not given any benefit of a reply till way back in October when he had been removed from the ministry. Along the line, we were asked to look for funding and I had to look for funding for this exercise from the Budget Office.

    “I wrote the Director-General of the Budget Office a letter that we have waiver from the Federal Civil Service Commission to recruit 4,556 operatives of the NIS. He told me categorically that the Federal Government was very conscious of overheads and there would be no money made available for it. I thought he was just being reluctant.

    “So I kept pressurising him. I went to that office practically every day for the whole of  that week and subsequent weeks. The last concession I got from him was that I should wait and anticipate that it would be captured in the 2014 budget.

    “So, along the line, the committee of the board met, we discussed this issue of Drexel, being the service provider.  I said look, I am not in support of anybody collecting money for recruitment.

    “I remember very clearly during that meeting that I told them that I read in the papers that in Niger State, there was a recruitment like that and people were meant to pay and there was a lot of outcry and the governor of the state had to step in and cancel it.

    “I said look, we may go this way if we don’t take time. But we kept going and we had no other board meeting to my knowledge till when the then secretary called us to the Steering Committee meeting in January. I told them that it was advisable for us to stagger the exercise and to go by states of origin.

    “But when we appeared before this committee of the Senate, we got to know that we would be conducting recruitment exams on March 15.

    “That was the first day I heard that. I did not hear from any board; there was no board meeting to that effect. As a man in uniform, you must follow the last order. Subsequently, if anyone asked me when Immigration recruitment would take place, I used to tell them that I don’t know. Sometimes, I would say the Minister has declared categorically that we will recruit on March 15.

    “Then, I sent the Deputy Comptroller-General, Human Resources of NIS, to attend all subsequent meetings and when it came to the issue of funding, he told me that they had made a budget of N212million to be used for that exercise.

    “I asked him where the money was going to come from since Immigration does not have such money. He said it was expected that the consultant should provide it. I said okay, go and take representatives of the service provider to the minister, maybe he would have funding for the exercise.

    “He told me there was none till about March 13, when N45million was made available for him to carry out that exercise. We were left with the option of having to mobilise all our officers in the state commands to attend to the recruitment exercise. We sent bulk Short Message Service (SMS) to all of them saying, ‘look gentlemen this is the day we have to work with.’

    “All of them kept calling me to ask how they were going to get money to do this exercise? I told them if any money is given to me, I will make it available to you. No money was made available to the NIS and the exercise was supposed to be conducted.

    “If you notice too, there was no advertisement giving clear guidelines on how to go about it until March 14 that people were asked to go to the various centres for the tests.”

    Asked why the NIS could not stop the fatal exercise, the NIS boss stated, “We were not the drivers of this process at all. So the decision to stop it would never have come from us.”

    On why he did not see the tragedy coming, Parradang said, “Of all the capacities that God has given human beings, nobody knows what is going to happen tomorrow.”

    On his part, Tapgun said that the consultant released N45million out of N212million requested by the board for the conduct of the exercise, a situation he argued, caused “serious logistics problems on the day of the exercise.”

    However, Moro insisted that adequate arrangements were made by the Ministry, the CDFIPB and the NIS to conduct a credible electronic recruitment into the Immigration Service. He said all efforts were geared to save the NIS from the negative image of job racketeering which had plagued it over the years.

    Said Moro: “We sincerely made appropriate and adequate preparations for a hitch-free exercise, but as most things in administrative and human conditions, the yield curve of expected outcome is mostly undefined.

    “My heart goes out to the families of those who have lost their dear loved ones. I sincerely sympathise with those injured. I share in their grief. I share in their pains. May I, at this juncture, assure you, distinguished senators and Nigerians, of my respect for the sanctity of human life.

    “The loss of these young Nigerians, who are needed as a critical human resource factor for nation building is most regrettable. As the Minister of Interior, under whose purview this unfortunate exercise took place, I cannot abdicate my responsibility. The buck stops here.”

    ONE YEAR AFTER

    The number of Nigerians who benefitted from the President’s largesse even though far less than those that were directly or indirectly affected, obviously would thank their stars for a supposedly happy ending to a tragic incident. To them, it took the blood and sweat of their loved ones to secure a means of livelihood in the ever-ballooning job market in the country.

    Parradang had in a tribute to mark the one year anniversary of the fatal recruitment exercise in Abuja, titled: In memory of the 15 NIS job seekers “described the tragedy that emasculated the exercise as both “humbling” and “agonising.” Parradang was however grateful to the President for fulfilling his promise of automatic job slots to relatives of the dead and injured.

    He listed those who paid the “supreme sacrifice” in their attempt to secure the NIS jobs as follows: Dorathy Edidiog ????Dorcas Danladi, Lucy Akpan Eno, Muhammed Musa,

    Taiwo Dorcas, Sunday Okezue Kalu, Ama Grace and ??Brown Darlington???. Others were Ibrahim Mohammed, ?Maryam Kekere, Sandra Amu, ??Patience Agada, Mudashiru M. Ahmed, ??Auta D. Adams and Oyiza Yusuf.

    The statement read in part: “It is a year today, 15th March 2015 when 15 young Nigerians died under painful circumstances when they presented themselves for the recruitment exercise into the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS).

    “On behalf of all officers and men, I wish to use this medium once again to extend my sincere and deep condolences to the families of the deceased…”

    It will be recalled that shortly after the incident, the President Goodluck Jonathan, ordered the cancellation of the entire recruitment exercise and constituted the Presidential Committee on NIS Recruitment to assist the Civil Defense, Fire, Immigration, and Prison Services Board (CDFIPB) in a fresh recruitment exercise which is currently in progress.  In constituting the said Committee, the President promised automatic recruitment into the NIS for three members of the family of the deceased (one of whom must be a female).

    “It is gratifying to note that this Presidential promise has been kept in its entirety when he met with families of the deceased on the 13th of March, 2015 at the Presidential villa, where in addition to the three automatic slots, the Federal Government also offered N5million only to each member of the deceased families, to cushion the effects of the loss of their bread winners and loved ones, pick the pieces of their lives and move on.

    “It is pertinent to state that the process of identifying genuine and authentic relatives/family members of the deceased has been daunting, laborious and time-consuming, as cases of multiple representations had to be thoroughly sorted out to ensure that only real family members are beneficiaries of the Presidential promise of automatic job placement.

    “The CGI, President of Immigration Officers Wives Association (IMMOWA), and State Command Comptrollers on behalf of the Honourable Minister of Interior/Chairman CDFIPB had been in touch with family members of the deceased all to reassure them that their loved ones did not die in vain. To us in the NIS, the memories of these 15 persons who paid the supreme sacrifice in their quest to serve the fatherland will remain evergreen in our minds.”

    Whither: Senate Investigative report?

    Following the belated gesture of the President last week, the question on the lips of most Nigerians today, is where is the report of the Senate Committee on Interior that probed the calamity? The Chairman of the Committee, Senator Bagudu had in May 2014 submitted a verbatim report of the Committee which did not include the executive summary containing findings and recommendations of the committee to the Senate. Although the committee had two weeks to conclude its report, Bagudu said they could not submit the report as scheduled because the supporting documents requested from stakeholders who made presentations during the public hearing were not yet available.

    Bagudu, according to reports, also dismissed insinuations that members of his committee neither saw nor signed the report. “As far as I am concerned, every member of the committee made inputs into the report at compilation stage as regards findings  made about the recruitment tragedy and even very much contributed to the recommendations arrived at, at the end of the day.”

    A source close to the committee insisted that the delay in considering the report by the Senate should not be blamed on the committee. He argued that since the committee had carried out its assignment and submitted its report, it now behooves on the Senate’s leadership to list the report for consideration.

    The source said: “There are so many other reports submitted that have not been considered. However, on our part, we have done our job. The committee has laid its report before the Senate. ”

    Analysts are quick to point out that the report of the Senate on the incident may have died on arrival since the Minister of Interior, Moro, who is at the epicentre of the recruitment storm is one of the political protégés of the Senate President, David Mark.

    Although, the Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules and Business, Senator Ita Enag, had in one of his media briefings insisted that all outstanding reports before the Senate would be considered before expiration of the 7th Senate, a Senator who spoke about the report in confidence said that the report may not be considered by the Senate in view of the close bond between the Minister and Mark, who many believed influenced the appointment of Moro as a minister in 2011. The source said: “Nothing can come out of the report because the minister involved is widely known to be like a political son to the Senate President, apart from both of them belonging to the same ethnic stock in Benue State.”

    Chairman, Senate Committee on Information, Media, and Public Affairs, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, when asked about the status of the report and the cause of the delay in considering it, directed one of our correspondents to the Office of the Senate Leader, Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba, saying all enquiries should be directed to him.

    Responding to a question on why the report of the committee is yet to see the light of day in the Senate, Ndoma-Egba, dismissed insinuations that the report was deliberately being kept under wraps due to vested interests. He said the report was undergoing normal legislative procedure and would be considered at the appropriate time.

    Ndoma-Egba in a text message to one of our correspondents in Abuja simply said: “Reports are scheduled by the Committee on Rules and Business and the report will certainly be  scheduled before the end of this Senate. Why would the Senate want to cover up? What is the Senate’s ‘personal’ interest in the report other than the public good?”

    CONCLUSION

    Even though President Jonathan had fulfilled part of his promise to the victims of the exercise, it is yet to be seen when applicants who paid N1000 each to buy scratch cards will get their refund as directed by the President. Moreover, the report of the Senate investigative panel which Nigerians expected to unravel the incident and spell out appropriate dire sanctions against those culpable appears to have been placed under ‘arrest’ inside the hallowed chambers of the people’s assembly. Even though the Senate Leader has assured that the report would be considered before the 7th Senate winds up in June, such assurance can only be taken with a pinch of salt until the peoples’ representatives walk their talk.

    Would this unpardonable delay in the consideration of the report be another case of justice denied on the part of the victims? We wait to see.