Tag: immigration

  • Fixing Immigration, in Principle

    Fixing Immigration, in Principle

    That you need to know now that House Republican leaders have unveiled a list of “principles” that have raised hopes for a breakthrough on immigration reform this year:

    Principles are no substitute for actual legislation, and we’re still a great distance from a deal. Repairing a system so huge and so broken is a big undertaking for any Congress, much less this dismally dysfunctional one. The Republicans’ grab bag of ideas still leaves Democrats nothing to negotiate with.

    That said, the list’s release Thursday, after years of stalemate, leaves us with a palmful of blessings to count.

    LEGALIZATION! The question about the nation’s 11 million unauthorized immigrants has always been this: Are they out or in? Criminals or potential Americans? The new principles say that these immigrants must “get right with the law.” This is a big change from “get out,” the central immigration position of the Republicans’ 2012 presidential nominee, Mitt Romney, who embraced the “self-deportation” mantra of his adviser Kris Kobach, author of Arizona’s brutal immigration law. Mr. Romney’s moral and electoral failure left his party in dire straits with Latino voters. From absolute denial to the brink of grudging acceptance is a big step away from neo-nativism.

    AN OVERDUE EPIPHANY ON DREAMERS The principles also acknowledge that children should not be punished for their parents’ acts, a central premise of the Dream Act, a bill to legalize some young immigrants brought here as children. It’s wonderful that Republicans, too, now endorse giving young people — raised as Americans, but with sharply diminished hopes for advancement after high school — a full shot at a future.

    But as we await an actual Republican bill, or bills, there remain serious pitfalls to watch out for:

    WHAT ABOUT CITIZENSHIP? Any legalization plan has to include the real possibility of immigrants’ becoming Americans. The principles rule out a “special” path to citizenship but do not reject outright the possibility of eventual naturalization for the 11 million. The details matter, and we haven’t seen them yet. Republicans need to remember: Maybe some European or Asian societies are happy to rely on imported laborers with no right to vote, no representation or hope of equality, but that’s not the American way, and must never be.

    NEW ENFORCEMENT AND TOO FEW VISAS The Republicans are demanding “significant fines” and other punishments for the undocumented, and the meeting of enforcement benchmarks as a condition for legalization, along with mandatory national expansion of the E-Verify hiring database and a new entry-exit visa system. New layers of enforcement, onerous to the point of spiteful, cannot be allowed to prevent immigrants from leaving the shadows. Increased powers for states and localities to enforce immigration laws — an invitation to racial profiling and other abuses — have no place in any bill. And reforms to legal immigration — with visas for farmworkers, high-skilled workers and others — must be expansive enough to ease crushing backlogs that discourage millions overseas.

    THE DEPORTER IN CHIEF As we wait for a bill, which could come in months or years or never, deportations continue. The Obama administration has expelled nearly two million people, breaking up thousands of the families President Obama has repeatedly promised to protect. If Congress fails, will he protect them through his own administrative action, as he already has by deferring deportations for a relative handful of unauthorized youths?

    THE TEMPTATION TO DESPAIR We are a long way from the hopeful days when John McCain and Edward Kennedy embarked on big bipartisan Senate legislation that was eventually killed by a Republican filibuster. Reform has died several deaths since then, and millions have suffered. Now Republicans, the party of self-deportation and Arizona-style laws, may be edging closer to saying yes to legal status for millions of the undocumented. Who knows if they’re serious, or if any bills will get past the party’s “hell no” caucus. It will be clear soon enough whether this is the first step back toward the rational, humane reform that should have passed years ago.

    – New York Times

  • Canada imposes new immigration rules

    Prospective visitors to Canada from several countries, including Nigeria, will be required to provide fingerprints and a digital photograph when they apply for a visitor visa, study or work permit.

    In a release made available to The Nation, this new requirement which took effect from last Wednesday, according to Immigration officials in Abuja, will not only help protect the safety and security of Canadians while helping facilitate legitimate travel, it will also protect prospective visitors by making it more difficult for others to forge, steal or use an applicant’s identity to gain access to Canada.

    The new requirement will put Canada in line with other countries which are already collecting this information from visitors, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, countries in the European Union Schengen Zone, and Japan.

    In the long run, the use of this information will make entry to Canada easier by providing a reliable tool to readily confirm a person’s identity.

    Applicants will need to go in person to a visa application centre (VAC) to submit their application and give their fingerprints and have their photograph taken. There is a new fee of $85 CAD for the collection of fingerprints and the photograph, which includes application services at the VAC. Family members who apply together for a visitor visa will pay a maximum fee of $170 CAD.

    However, applicants under the age of 14 or over the age of 79 will not have to give this information. Diplomats and government officials travelling on official business are also exempt.

    Visitors upon arrival in Canada at a port of entry will have to submit themselves to a Canadian border services officer, who is expected to use all available sources of information to confirm that person’s identity, the release further stated.

     

  • Boko Haram: Immigration loses 400 officers

    Boko Haram: Immigration loses 400 officers

    No fewer than 400 officers and men of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) have been killed by Boko Haram insurgents, it was learnt yesterday.

    There have been 11 jail breaks across the country believed to have been carried out by insurgents in which many prison officers were killed, Senator Atiku Bagudu said yesterday.

    Bagudu is the chair, Senate Committee on Interior. He spoke in Abuja.

    He said the figures were given to members of his committee when they went on oversight function.

    He noted that though the country’s Northeast borders had posed some problems in an attempt to curtail the activities of insurgents, the deployment of technology and the increment in personnel would check the menace.

    He said: “We need to give more arms to the prison service. The prison service should not be considered a secondary arm of the security system, it is a major one.”

    He noted that the failure of the Senate to transfer Prisons Service from the Exclusive List to the Concurrent List during the Constitution amendment reflected the fear the lawmakers have for state police because prison officials also bear arms.

    Bagudu said the country’s border with Cameroon has always posed a problem.

    He said: “Chadians coming to the northeast are always armed and use firearms, because Chad had been at war.”

    He added: “We are members of the ECOWAS group of nations. We are committed to free entry and exit. Even if we seal our borders, we can’t stop ECOWAS members from coming into our country.

    “Fencing four thousand miles border will be very difficult. Technology has changed the way we monitor the borders, with increased use of technology and more personnel, we can achieve more with less spending.”

    He also commented on the voting on amendment to Section 29 of the Constitution which defined the age when a person comes to a full age, with an addition spelling out that a woman who is married is deemed to be of full age.

    He said: “The argument that brought about this furore is the renunciation of citizenship. There was an attempt to remove its second element which relates to a woman who is married and that failed.

    “It is a total misrepresentation that the Senate has approved child marriage. Marriage is regulated by the Marriage Act, Islamic laws and Customary Law. What you find missing in these laws is the absence of the definition of the age of marriage.

    Around the world, marriage below the age of 18 is allowed. I am not saying that it is right, but it is allowed. We were not debating child marriage, and that is not what we contemplated.

    Senator Akin Odunsi, (Ogun West) who also spoke on the controversial issue, noted that the Senate did not create the Section.

    Odunsi said the provision was extant in the Constitution and that the Review Committee recommended that it be removed, but the Senate could not raise the number of votes to delete it.

    The lawmaker noted that public reaction tended to indicate that the Senate inserted the clause into the Constitution.

    He insisted that it was wrong to say that the Senate passed a law on child marriage.

    On Local Government autonomy, Senator Odunsi said although the Senate voted against the recommendation, there was still need for the third tier of government to be well funded so that they could meet their obligations to the people.

    “Funding of local governments at the moment is inadequate. I think we can only expect that the state governments should adequately finance local government. This is because they are the closest to the people and they need to carry out their responsibilities to the people,” he said.

    He explained that most Senators felt that granting local autonomy amounted to creating a state within a state.

  • Imperialism, immigration and UK visa bond

    Imperialism, immigration and UK visa bond

    The proposed decision of the British Government to introduce a UK visa bond of 3000 pounds for first time visitors to that country from six countries including Nigeria has understandably generated heated reactions. The Nigerian government has vehemently protested against the idea and threatened to retaliate. Many commentators have described the decision as discriminatory, unjust, racist, hostile and against the spirit of the commonwealth. However, others contend that there is absolutely nothing wrong in the British conservative government taking whatever steps it considers desirable to protect its perceived national interests. The Cameron government believes that citizens of the affected countries – Nigeria, Ghana, Bangladesh, India and Pakistan – are most likely to violate that country’s immigration laws and compromise her security. Those who hold the latter view insist that Nigeria in particular, should get her act right, actualize her potentials, achieve rapid development and thus discourage her youths from seeking to flee the country to foreign havens at all costs.

    Of course, those who hold this view have a pertinent point. On a personal note, for instance, I have persistently and trenchantly refused for several years to acquire British citizenship despite my wife being a British citizen. I simply do not see how the average Briton will not rightly see me as a bloody parasite and second class citizen should I indulge in such an option. Yet many of Nigeria’s depraved and thieving elite after looting the country blind, deliberately travel abroad to deliver their babies so that such children can enjoy foreign citizenship! Talk of absolutely unpatriotic elite with no faith in the future of a country whose grave they are actively digging on a daily basis.

    For me, however, the proposed UK visa policy offers us an opportunity to re-examine the dependent role of Nigeria and Africa’s role in the global political economy and the way in which, at every point in time, her destiny has been determined by external interests to her continued detriment. Today, capitalism is in severe crisis and immigration has become a key issue in most western capitalist countries. The triumphalism attendant on the collapse of communism with Francis Fukuyama proclaiming the ‘end of history’ and capitalist democracy as the terminal point of human development, has largely evaporated. Global economic power is markedly shifting from the west to the east with the remarkable resurgence of China and other Asian countries, even as many western countries lie economically prostrate and millions of their citizens sink deeper into poverty.

    In their authoritative handbook and guide to the contemporary anti-capitalist movement, a group of radical scholars and activists including Susan George, Alex Callinicos and George Monbiot, point out ironically that at a certain stage in the development of industrial capitalism, the western countries caused the ‘forced migration’ of millions of people from the underdeveloped world through the human slave trade. As they put it, “The imperialists obtained labour by force, first through transporting between 10 and 20 million African slaves to work in the mines and plantations of the Americas, then through various forms of indentured labour in which over 30 million Indians and Chinese were more or less coerced to migrate. Africans and Indians were also forced, through tax demands and sometimes physically, to work for European colonisers”. Yet, these same countries, which had developed largely through the exploitative slave trade and colonialism that lasted over 400 years, are today “imposing ever harsher and more brutal restrictions against the movement of people (unless they are white or exceptionally rich). At the same time they are demanding policies which create unemployment and poverty which are at least partly responsible for the wars and political repression from which people flee”.

    In his immortal ‘How Europe Underdeveloped Africa’, Walter Rodney has demonstrated irrefutably the link between western imperialism and underdevelopment in Africa. Of course, some contend that several decades after the termination of colonial rule, Africa has no excuse for remaining mired in poverty and underdevelopment. This is a short sighted and simplistic view. Africa is the most brutalized, raped, oppressed and dehumanized continent in human history. The scars of the experience continue to haunt the continent. As Claude Ake so clearly put it “The circumstances of our history have conspired to produce an elite which cannot function because it has no sense of identity or integrity and no confidence, does not know where it is coming from or where it is going. This has to do with Africa’s long decline over the centuries and our domination by outsiders”. Nowhere best illustrates Ake’s thesis than the tragic experience of the Congo, one of the most resource-endowed regions of the world that is today a hotbed of mindless violence, brutality, unimaginable suffering and poverty. The current fate of the Congo can only be understood within the context of the brutal and savage plundering of the region by King Leopold II of Belgium in the colonial era.

    The same western countries that forcibly exported millions of souls from Africa over four centuries and stalled the continent’s progress are today trying all means to stop immigration of people fleeing the hell that is a consequence of their historical legacy on the continent. Worse still, even after the formal end of colonialism, they are still dictating the continent’s economic destiny, insisting on the implementation of neo-liberal economic policies – free trade, unbridled liberalization and deregulation of the economy, privatization, removal of subsidies, currency devaluation etc – that worsen poverty and deepen underdevelopment. These are the same countries that subsidise and protect key sectors of their own economies.

    In his classic, “Africa In The World of the 20th Century”, the late Professor Bade Onimode argues: “Why, this being the case, should the governments of developing countries not be allowed to exercise any controls on the entry of manufactured goods, capital, investment and technology into their countries, while the countries of the North stoutly shut out migrant workers (labour) from the developing countries, including Eastern Europeans, who want to enter their countries? Why should free trade, liberalization and globalization be good for manufactured products, capital and technology (intellectual property rights) and be bad for labour? Is this not simply because of the inequality between the powerful owners of commodities, capital and technology on the one hand, and the weak atomized owners of labour-power, on the other?”

    The pertinence of these questions posed over a decade ago has been highlighted by the UK visa bond controversy. It is not enough for the Nigerian government simply to declare its intention to retaliate against the proposed UK visa policy. The challenge is more fundamental than that. We need a government in Nigeria that will give Africa the intellectual and political leadership that will help liberate the continent from the grip of neo-liberalism and come up with policies that can effectively address the technological dependency that lies fundamentally at the root of our underdevelopment. The current leadership across Africa has proven pathetically incapable of rising to the challenge of containing rampaging neo-liberalism and devising original, alternative ideas for transforming the continent. Thus, the empty talk of an African Renaissance championed by ex-Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Thambo Mbeki of South Africa a few years ago has expectedly fizzled out into nothingness. It is tragic that dyed in the wool World Bank and IMF apologists have been in charge of Nigeria’s economic policies for the last 13 years. We can thus understand the continuing remarkable attainment of unprecedented economic growth without development, which enables Nigeria to get richer while the majority of Nigerians get poorer.

  • Anxiety over planned retirement of Immigration chiefs

    Palpable fear and tension have gripped the top hierarchy of the Nigerian Immigration Services (NIS) on plans to retire some Deputy Comptroller Generals (DCGs), who should have been elevated.

    According to laid- down civil service regulations, a level 15-17 officer must have spent at least four years as Assistant Comptroller before he can qualify as a Deputy Comptroller.

    In an interview last week by the Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prison Board, eight of the 24 shorlisted Deputy Comptrollers are said to be qualified for the position, while 18 are not qualified since they have spent only more than one year in their current positions.

    Of the lot, the two most senior are due to retire in July and September, which should clear the coast for any of the other most senior officers to be appointed.

    Part of the conditions for promotion is seniority and merit, conditions which had previously been abused.

    In March, two most Senior Deputy Comptrollers were nominated to act as DG in contravention of the Federal Character Commission regulation.

    The retirement of the former Comptroller Rose Uzouma has led to a long drawn battle of succession.

    Of the 36 state commands, five comptrollers are said to be from Benue State. Seven vacancies exist in

    the position under dispute with even those not qualified pulling political strings to get the position.

    According to the provisions of the board’s scheme of service, for candidates to be eligible for promotion to the post of Deputy Comptroller, they must have spent four years in the post of Assistant Comptroller- General.

  • Two immigration officers to appear in court

    Two immigration officers in Abia State will today appear in court for alleged kidnap attempt, robbery and assault on a civil servant, Eke Kalu.

    Kalu said he had just finished a meeting at a hotel and was about to drive out when he noticed that the hotel gate had been locked.

    He said upon inquiry from guards, he was told that two men ordered them to close the gate.

    “Immediately, two men appeared and tried to forcefully open my car door.

    I came down from the car and the men started beating me.

    “They smashed my side mirror and dented the car roof. I lost N150,000 and other personal effects. I was saved by good Samaritans. The owner of the hotel called the police.

    “When the police came the men were insulting them and refused to enter the patrol van. It took the help of other people in the hotel to force them into the patrol van.

    “I couldn’t follow them to the station as I had to go the hospital. The following day, I went to the station and was told the men were immigration officers.”

     

  • Chopras: Fix immigration ‘slippery ladder’

    Chopras: Fix immigration ‘slippery ladder’

    When we came to U.S., we were able to grab onto a high rung. Not so for today’s newcomers.

    Despite the heated differences over immigration reform, everyone can agree on one thing: Nobody comes to America to get poorer.

    The two of us speak from experience. During medical school back in India, our gaze was fixed firmly on America. The era was the early 1970s. The Vietnam War had created a serious doctor shortage. With unusual swiftness after we passed an easy exam, we entered the country, first Deepak and then Sanjiv. An overnight flight landed us in the same community hospital in Plainfield, N.J. We were off and running in the land of opportunity.

    Our reception, though, was lukewarm at best. Immigrants grab on to the ladder of success at different rungs. We grabbed a high rung, no doubt. We arrived with a medical degree and had spoken fluent English our whole lives. But native-born doctors looked down on foreign-born ones. As graduates of rigorous U.S. medical schools, they had their suspicions about our training in India, which happened to be excellent.

    The prejudice against us wasn’t severe, but it was there. We knew that Boston medicine was legendary, so that’s where we set our sights. But there was scarce chance back then that a South Asian physician could get affiliated with one of Harvard’s prestigious hospitals. Both of us wound up at the Veterans Administration hospital and worked with determination and ambition.

    Changing opportunities

    Looking back, we were climbing a slippery ladder to success. For every three steps we took up, we’d slip two steps down. But at least the rungs weren’t pulled out from under us.

    Today, the sad truth is that opportunities for immigrants have changed. As the gap between rich and poor has drastically widened, and as illegal immigration has created so much hostility, a lot of rungs have broken on the ladder or don’t exist anymore.

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist David Autor has coined a phrase for it: the “polarization of job opportunities.” White-collar jobs for the college-educated exist at one extreme. Service jobs for the less educated, including the invisible immigrant workers who do the jobs no one else wants to do, exist at the opposite end.

    This polarization has been exacerbated by major job losses in the middle due to the recession and technology. This is not just a problem for immigrants, of course. The long-term unemployed (particularly anyone older than 50), laid-off factory workers and recent college graduates are forced to seek work for which they are overqualified.

    America needs to repair the ladder to success, putting everyone on more solid footing no matter what rung they grab first. To grasp how urgent this need is, a fellow Indian immigrant, Fareed Zakaria, on his CNN program, GPS, assailed the myth of upward mobility in this country. Among his key points, Zakaria included studies over the past two decades that showed economic mobility has decreased in America. We now lag behind many European countries and Canada. Rags-to-riches stories are becoming the exception. A Pew Research report on upward mobility shows that few poor people rise into the upper middle class. A lot of factors are responsible, including education, the neighborhood you live in, and the stability of your family structure.

    Big economic impact

    The extended economic downturn has put a squeeze on every rung, but immigrants get pushed down especially hard. Laws against hiring undocumented workers are tightening on employers, especially in the construction and agricultural sector. Deportations have sharply increased under the Obama administration.

    On the upper rungs, students who come to America to take advantage of our world-class colleges and universities are forced to return to their home countries before applying to be readmitted and find work here. Thus the law forces a brain drain that helps our foreign competitors and frustrates high-tech employers where thousands of jobs go begging.

    All these trends need to be reversed with a clear-eyed understanding that immigration is economically, culturally and spiritually enriching for America. Members of Congress and each of us, native born or immigrant, must actively counter any anxiety or suspicion that immigration is a threat. The answer isn’t special treatment for immigrants. It’s equal opportunity for all.

     

     

    Deepak Chopra is the founder of The Chopra Foundation. Sanjiv Chopra is professor of medicine and faculty dean for Continuing Medical Education at Harvard. Their dual memoir, Brotherhood: Dharma, Destiny and the American Dream was released this month.

     

  • Immigration deports 17 Nigeriens

    The Kaduna State Command of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) yesterday deported 17 Nigerians.

    The deportees were reportedly arrested at an uncompleted building in Barnawa, Kaduna.

    Also arrested were 57 commercial motorcyclists (Okada), who were said to have migrated to Kaduna from other places, including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and Kano, following the ban on Okada in both areas.

    The Comptroller of the Nigeria Immigration Service in the state, Hamman Yerima, told reporters that the foreigners were arrested following a tip-off from a sister security agency.

    According to him, though no weapon was found on them, the foreigners resisted arrest and injured an NIS officer.

    Yerima said: “At 5am today (Thursday morning), my men carried out an operation in some uncompleted buildings on Uganda Road in Barnawa and arrested 77 persons suspected to be illegal immigrants.

    “After interrogation and screening, we discovered that 57 of them are Nigerians who came to Kaduna to operate their Okada business from Kano, the FCT and other places following the ban on Okada operation in those places.

    “We also discovered that the other 20 were from Niger Republic. However, three of them were found to be in procession of valid ECOWAS resident permits, while the remaining 17 had no documents at all.

  • U.S. Senate to tighten immigration law

    An immigration bill being written in the Senate in United States aims to wipe out nearly all illegal crossings along the southwestern border with Mexico while maintaining a 13-year timetable for existing illegal residents to win citizenship, sources said on Wednesday.

    The carefully crafted language is intended to attract support from Republican in Congress for comprehensive immigration legislation this year, while accommodating Democrats’ desire to help the estimated 11 million foreigners living in the U.S. illegally.

    The idea is to create tough law-and-order provisions that backers could argue would finally fix a porous U.S. border, as well as keeping foreigners who have obtained visas from overstaying them.

    A bipartisan group of eight Democratic and Republican senators writing the bill is hoping to sign off on the measure in coming days.

    Under the tentative deal worked out by the group, the Department of Homeland Security would be tasked with developing plans to stop nearly all illegal border crossings, two sources familiar with the plan said.

    Border security would be linked to the path to citizenship and the standards would be set by Congress.

    Once DES submitted the plan, the government would be allowed to start providing initial provisional legal status to the illegal immigrants who qualify, one source said.

    The agency would be given three billion dollars to immediately implement the plan, according to one Senate aide familiar with the legislation.

    The two sources, who asked not to be identified, said the DHS border plan would have a goal of stopping 90 per cent of illegal border crossings at “high risk’’ areas.

    If the agency failed to meet the goal in any of the first five years after the immigration law was enacted, a newly created commission would come up with additional steps to stop visa overstays and illegal border crossings, the sources said.

    The federal government would dedicate another two billion dollars to achieve these security steps, the Senate aide said.

     

  • Fashola blames Fed Govt for under-funding Customs, Immigration

    Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola (SAN), yesterday blamed the Federal Government for under-funding the Nigeria Immigration Service and Nigeria Customs Service.

    He spoke when he received the General Officer Commanding 81 Division of the Nigerian Army, Maj.-Gen. Obi Abel Umahi and the new Comptroller of the Nigeria Immigration Service, Lagos, Mr. Rasheed Odupeyin, in his office.

    Governor Fashola said: “If we take internal security very seriously, these agencies will not lack the basic tools required for their work. This is an agency I think has a very important role to play in our national security.”

    He said the first line of defence must be the protection of the country’s border, adding: “The two agencies are saddled with the responsibility of ensuring that this is done effectively.”

    Said he: “Given the revenue that flows in from the combined activities of these two agencies, it is perhaps worrisome that things like vehicles and fuel are not taken seriously.

    “We know that although the military has left governance, Nigerians have not fully demilitarised themselves. People pose as military officers when they are not.

    “In the last 24 to 48 hours, the brigade commandant informed me of some persons, who were apprehended for working around in military uniform. This is why it is important that we close ranks because people disobey civil laws by wearing uniform.

    “We must not encourage this kind of thing. We must close ranks and stop it because it gives our country a bad image. I do tell the uniform officers in Lagos that the uniform they wear represent the symbol of authority of the state.

    “We must work together to ensure that people comply with law and order.”