Tag: Visa

  • 12-month visa wait time in Nigeria too long, says U.S

    12-month visa wait time in Nigeria too long, says U.S

    Julie Stufft is the United States Visa Services for the Bureau of Consular Affairs. At this briefing attended by United States Bureau Chief OLUKOREDE YISHAU, Stufft discusses updates in visa processing worldwide. The briefing was organized by the Washington Foreign Press Center. Excerpts: 

     Update you on U.S. visa processing 

     I’m just looking at the data from our Fiscal Year 2023, which runs from October to October. So our fiscal year in the U.S. Government just ended, and I can share those statistics with you. We will also have updated statistics I think for the calendar year, which may be of interest as well. 

    Our visa processing in Fiscal Year 2023, we had set goals to return to pre-pandemic processing, which for us was 2019, like most organizations. In that – in 2019, we issued about 8.5 million visas, U.S. visas. This was significantly more than we were able to do last year, and of course during the pandemic we – our operations were very limited. So we thought that it was an ambitious goal to look at 2019 numbers and try to get back to that level. 

    In fact, at the end of the fiscal year we realized this month that we did significantly more than that. Our overseas posts issued more than 10.5 million visas, so 2 million more than we had anticipated being able to (inaudible), and almost hitting the highest level that we’ve ever done in any year at our overseas missions. Half of our overseas missions set their own record for that country for adjudication of visas of that country, and that includes several that are represented here at this briefing. And worldwide, we set records for visa adjudication for work visas and for student visas, as well (inaudible) categories. 

    I would say that if I had to sum this up in one phrase, I would say that more people who are seeking to visit the United States today can visit the United States immediately than ever before in the past; that is, there are more people who hold U.S. visas that are valid or can travel without visa status to the U.S. tomorrow if they board a flight than at any time in our history. Very, very excited to be able to say that. 

    Read Also: BREAKING: Why we cancelled visa of 264 Nigerian passengers on arrival – Saudi Embassy

    Visa Processing in Nigeria

    Let me take the one about the 12-month wait first. You mentioned that 12-month waits for a visa to apply to go and visit family, or frankly any reason to go to the United States, is too long. And I cannot tell you how strongly I agree with you on that. Twelve months is not something that I can justify, because it’s not what we want to happen. We would much rather see wait times be a week to two weeks, as they are in about half of our posts overseas. So when we see these very long wait times, a year or more, these are an anomaly that comes out of the pandemic but the delays in some cases that I mentioned because of the demand.   

    Let me talk about Nigeria specifically. Nigeria is one of the places – we have two posts in Nigeria – where we have processed more visas this year, I think issued more visas this year, than I think any other year previously. We can double-check on that, but huge gains have been made in Nigeria to accommodate the demand. It’s a very high-demand place for us – and not just for visitors but for students and workers in many categories. So I see that the wait times are coming down in Nigeria. I know that they’ve been doing incredible work there to make that happen. And that is our goal for sure, to make those wait times go down.   

    Expanding to the rest of Africa, I do want to highlight that we issued more student visas for African – in the Africa region this year than ever before. That’s something that we’re extremely proud of, and we hope to continue that trend. A lot of it is just very high demand for student experience in the United States from students in Africa, which is also great. But as we work through the wait times and make sure that we can manage this, we are absolutely placing the Africa region as a priority in that to make sure that we keep wait times low and make it possible for people to apply.   

    The 12-month wait time you mentioned, of course our fear with this – and many of our colleagues in the U.S. Government have the same fear – is that people will choose not to come to the United States because of a wait time like that. They may pivot to another country to study or to work or choose a different location for their vacation, and we want to make sure that doesn’t happen. 

    Plan for 2024

    Let me also say what we’re working on for 2024 in this next year. Obviously, we – we’re still working very hard on reducing wait time. In some – say, a handful – of our overseas locations, we still have very high wait times, some exceeding a year still for one category of visa, which is a first-time visitor, someone who needs an interview for their visa. All other categories have low wait times globally. But we’re very focused on the first-time visitor interview wait time. And what’s very interesting to us is that many of the places where we’ve set records for visa production this year are the same places where we still have really high wait time. This just indicates a very high level of demand, and we’re going to use this year to really get control of that in these five or six places with very high wait times. 

    We have a couple of other innovations that you’ve heard me maybe talk about before that I want to highlight for you that we’re doing in 2024. One is domestic renewal of visas. This is being run as a pilot starting next month and into the beginning of the calendar year, 2024. What this means is that people who are living and working in the United States on a long-term work visa do not have to leave the United States to apply for their next visa or to renew their visa. They would be able to send it to us here in Washington, have it renewed without leaving the country and sent back to them in their own passport. 

    This is a huge undertaking; we’re very excited about it. We’re starting small with a pilot of 20,000 visas in December, January, February, and we look forward to opening that to more categories of workers living in the United States in the rest of 2024. This is a very exciting programme. We did do it in the past; the last time we did it was about 20 years ago, and now we’re ready to restart that. 

    We’re also very focused on waiving visa interviews where we can, specifically for prior travelers. So U.S. border policy has been this year to allow interviews to be waived for visa applicants who previously traveled to the United States, and we hope to continue that in the next year. 

    Paperless visa

    And I will highlight that we did our first small-scope pilot of a paperless visa, which means that the visa process is the same, but there is a – there’s no physical visa in someone’s passport. This is still just – piloted this for the first time, so this is not something that’s going to be happening in the next year. It’ll take us probably 18 months to have widespread use of this – or longer – but it’s very exciting that we’ve had this first step where we’ve actually seen visitors come through, and in this case they were immigrant visas, without a physical paper in their passport. That will ultimately in the future, as some other countries do, require an app or something that allows people to show their visa status without physical paper in their passport. We’re very, very excited about that. 

    So just to summarize what I’ve said to this point before your questions, we’ve had really staggering levels of visa adjudication production this year worldwide. We’ve had good progress on wait times. The average global wait times have reduced – last year they were about 200 days average worldwide, and then a few months ago 150 days, and now we’re closer to 140 days, and that continues to drop. We’re very excited and we’ve got more work to do on that, and we’re really focused on these innovations that will fundamentally change the way we do visa work in our U.S. missions overseas. 

    What paperless visa means

    This is the paperless visa. Yes, so our process is identical to the way it is. It’s not a – it’s not a visa that’s adjudicated electronically. It’s not processed electronically. Someone may still need an interview or to come and speak to a consular officer, but ultimately there will be no piece of paper. This saves everyone – I can’t tell you – a tremendous amount of effort in getting these very secure visa foils shipped out to all of our posts overseas, and this is just basically a very modern way to speak to the airlines and to the ports of entry at airports and the State Department all together to make this happen. We wanted to do this, frankly, for a long time, but now we have the full ability electronically to message someone’s visa status, and this is going to be a huge help for these applicants going forward. 

    We’ve already done a small pilot, now we’re branching out to other types of visas. We started with our embassy in Dublin was where we first tried this, because there is an airport facility there with U.S. officials who could check if someone boarded a plane, but we fully expect to expand that regionally and throughout the world. It will be piece by piece, but we’ll keep you updated on that. 

  • BREAKING: Why we cancelled visa of 264 Nigerian passengers on arrival – Saudi Embassy

    BREAKING: Why we cancelled visa of 264 Nigerian passengers on arrival – Saudi Embassy

    The Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia has clarified why it cancelled the visa of all the 264 passengers who arrived in Jeddah from Nigeria on Air Peace.

    The Nation reports authorities in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia cancelled the visa of the passengers who arrived Sunday, especially many who were visiting Saudi for Lesser Hajj.

    The flight took off from the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos via the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport, Kano Sunday night and landed at King Abdul-Aziz International Airport, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

    The incident occured barely one week after Air Peace launched a direct flight to Saudi Arabia.

    It was gathered that it was when the Nigerian embassy waded in that Saudi authorities reduced the number of passengers that would be returned to 177 from 264.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Saudi Arabian authorities cancel visas of 264 Nigerian passengers

    A statement by the Embassy, Monday evening obtained by The Nation explained that the passengers did not fulfil the entry conditions for the Kingdom.

    It noted that the applicable rules and regulations of Saudi Arabia were not met as they submitted incorrect information.

    The statement partly reads: “The passengers whom were denied entry and subsequently deported to their initial destinations didn’t fulfil the entry conditions and requirements in accordance with the applicable rules and regulations of the kingdom.

    “This procedure was not limited to Nigerian citizens only, but rather to citizens of other countries.”

    Details shortly…

  • Reps condemn cancellation of visa of Nigerian travellers by Saudi authority, seek inquiry

    Reps condemn cancellation of visa of Nigerian travellers by Saudi authority, seek inquiry

    The House of Representatives on Tuesday, November 14, condemned the cancellation of the visa of 264 Nigerian travellers on arrival in Saudi Arabia by the country’s authorities, describing it as an embarrassment to the country.

    In a resolution following a motion of urgent public importance moved by Hon. Kama Nkemkanma and three others, the House asked the federal government to as a matter of urgency take diplomatic steps as may be necessary to protect the image of the nation.

    It also asked the government to ensure the full implementation of the Bilateral Air Service Agreement and to protect Nigerian national Carriers flying into Saudi Arabia and protect the Nigerian travelling public.

    The House also asked its Committees on Foreign Affairs, Interior and Pilgrims Affairs to inquire into the immediate and remote circumstances surrounding the cancellation of already granted visas to 264 Nigerians on arrival at Jeddah aboard Air Peace.

    Hon Nkemkanma informed the House that the Saudi Arabian authorities cancelled the visa of all the 264 passengers airlifted by Nigeria’s major carrier, Air Peace on arrival at Jeddah in Saudi Arabia from Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport on Monday, 13th November, 2023.

    According to him, all the passengers went through the Advanced Passengers Pre-screening System, (APPS), which was also monitored live by the Saudi Arabian authorities before the flight left Nigeria.

    He said that sources at the Nigerian Embassy in Jeddah reported that even the Saudi immigration personnel could not locate who authorized the cancellation of the visas, even when the APPS which was live between both countries was concluded and the airline was already airborne to Jeddah.

    He said that upon the intervention of the Nigerian Embassy in Saudi, the authorities were said to have reduced the number of passengers that would be returned back to Nigeria from 264 to 170;

    He said further that Saudi Air has been operating directly from Nigeria to Saudi Arabia and that Air Peace has been receiving high patronage as a Nigerian carrier since it started flight service to Saudi at relatively lower fares, thereby helping Nigeria to conserve foreign exchange.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Saudi Arabian authorities cancel visas of 264 Nigerian passengers

    He claimed that stakeholders in the sector have attributed the development to aero-politics, stating that it could be a way to force the Nigerian operator out of the route, and raised concerns that Nigerian carries could actually be forced out of the route unless the government intervenes, probably using the principle of reciprocity.

    He said this action of Saudi authorities is an infringement on the letters and intendments of the Bilateral Air Service Agreement (BASA) between Nigeria and Saudi Arabia which is still in force;

    He expressed concern that this unfortunate event and diplomatic slight on Nigeria happened even when the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, His Excellency Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, was on a state visit to Saudi Arabia.

  • Visa application centres remain open in Nigeria, says Canadian High Commission

    Visa application centres remain open in Nigeria, says Canadian High Commission

    The suspension of activities at the Canadian High Commission in Abuja will not in anyway affect visa application, The Nation learnt

    The High Commission on its social media handle on Thursday said processing of immigration, refugee and citizenship applications remain ongoing.

    It also disclosed in statement on the High Commission’s X (formerly twitter) account that visa application centres in Abuja and Lagos remain open.

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    A statement on the High Commission’s X account on Thursday by its Public Affairs Saff member, Demilade Kosemani, reads: “As we continue to mourn the passing of our dear colleague from the High Commission of Canada in Abuja, please note the following information below:

    “Immigration, Refugee, and Citizenship Canada clients: processing of applications continues. Regardless of the suspension of operations at the High Commission of Canada in Abuja, the visa application centres in Abuja and Lagos remain open.”

    The commission suspended its operations following the Monday explosion from its power generating plant, which resulted in the deaths of two persons and injured two others.

  • UAE visa issues will be resolved soon, says Keyamo

    UAE visa issues will be resolved soon, says Keyamo

    The federal government has said efforts are ongoing to resolve the issues Nigerians are experiencing with the United Arab Emirates (UAE)visa.

    The Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo disclosed this at the closing ceremony of the 7th African Aviation Summit in Abuja on Thursday, September 14.

    He said it was crucial for airlines operating between Nigeria and the UAE to have reciprocal rights as per the Bilateral Air Services Agreements (BASA).

    He also stressed the importance of balanced and fair treatment between both countries.

    On the visa issues,  Keyamo said: “We are working the details out. When two countries agree at the very top level then of course all the government operatives will begin to work out the tiny details. So, we are beginning to work out all the tiny details. I met with Emirate before I left UAE, I met with Etihad before I left UAE and we are working out the details.

    Read Also: Keyamo’s agony and righteous indignation

    “The time frame, we cannot say the time frame. Kicking off an airline operation again on a route, it is not that you will go and grab one empty plane sitting in a place. There is no idle plane sitting anywhere, they have to reschedule their flights, restart their routes again, and all kinds of things. All kinds of permission will be taken from local authorities and of course, I made the point in speaking with them and I made it clear that they will have to give our airlines reciprocal rights under our BASA.

    “That is the point I insisted on, and they did say that any spot we need, they will give us as much as we give them those spots within Nigeria.”

    On foreign airlines blocked funds, he said: “Mr. President is very concerned about that it is one of the issues we went to discuss in the UAE. I spoke with the minister of finance and the coordinating minister of the economy and he has indicated that within the next few weeks, the Central Bank of Nigeria will be very clear as to the programme within which these issues will be addressed.

    “They will be paid off, these are not loans, they are trapped funds, they are funds that are there, it is only the issue of liquidity that is our problem. The issues of liquidity are being addressed as I speak right now. It is something that the president is very concerned about, and that issue, I said that we have addressed it in the UAE and very soon, you will hear from the financial sector”.

    The Chief Executive Officer of Airpeace, Allen Onyema, announced the acquisition of 10 Embraer E175 fleets while signing a bilateral maintenance agreement with the fleet company.

    He explained that with the acquisition, Embraer would assist in the setting up of its maintenance centre in the country.

    According to Onyema, the decision was based on the directive given to him by the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development Festus Keyamo, to drive the aviation sector forward while attracting investment through the maintenance policy.

    He said: “In line with fleet modernization policy, we just signed a further acquisition, further order of ten E175, with a stern order of five and five acquisition rights.

    “The minister called me two weeks ago and said moving forward, any Nigerian airline that wants to bring in brand-new planes must also think of maintenance capabilities for those planes in-house and within Nigeria.

    “He made it compulsory that if you are going into the acquisition, of more than 20 planes, you must show evidence that the original equipment manufacturer is going to support the setting up of a maintenance center here and for third parties here MOR. Now with the signature signed today, we have ordered 35 Embraer brand-new fleets.

    “We have signed 30 before, of which five have been delivered already, the E2s. Part of the things we signed today is that Embraer is going to help set up the maintenance center in Nigeria and it will be set up with immediate effects. So, this decision will help our national reserves and help conserve the forex of airlines in Africa when this comes to fruition.”

    Confirming the maintenance deal, Embraer management said the transaction is worth $ 300m while noting that delivery will begin in 2024.

    Embraer said, “Ever since we started this relationship in 2017, it has been smooth and great, and today it’s a momentous day. This transaction costs $ 300m, with the airline moving forward.

    “The first two aircraft will be delivered next year. The airline needs to grow. As the business moves forward, we need to work together, and the maintenance will create jobs and drive investment. And we will move forward with Air Peace to drive this growth.”

    ReplyForward
  • JUST IN: UK establishes visa centre in Enugu

    JUST IN: UK establishes visa centre in Enugu

    The United Kingdom has set up a visa centre in Enugu to facilitate visa applications by residents in the state, the southeast zone, and the country at large.

    The Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Chidiebere Onyia, disclosed this in a statement he issued on Monday, September 11, in Enugu.

    Onyia commended the United Kingdom government for the development, recalling that the visa centre was part of Governor Peter Mbah’s earlier requests during the visit to the Government House by the UK High Commissioner to Nigeria, Richard Montgomery, in June this year.

    The statement said the government received the news of the visa centre with delight and satisfaction, stressing that it would further enhance economic partnership and cultural exchanges between Enugu State and the United Kingdom.

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    He said: “The Enugu state government, therefore, looks forward to a strong, mutually beneficial relationship with the UK, as the visa centre would help cement the relationship.”

    “The government called on the people, especially those residing in the South-East to avail themselves of the opportunity provided to file their visa applications in the state, saying the government would ensure improved security both to residents and visitors carrying on business in the state.

    Onyia reiterated that the state was open for business and investment more than ever before.

    The Nation reports that the apex Igbo sociocultural group, Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide had in June in Enugu, where the leadership of Ohanaeze Ndigbo received the British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Richard Montgomery at the National Secretariat of Ohanaeze Ndigbo.

    President General of Ohanaeze, Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, had appealed for the setting up of a British Visa office in the southeast region.

    According to Iwuanyanwu, the southeast zone accounts for over sixty percent of Nigerians traveling to the United Kingdom, stressing that it was unfair that they were subjected to travelling to Abuja and Lagos to procure their visas.

  • Visa: Hypocrisy of African Unity

    Visa: Hypocrisy of African Unity

    About two weeks ago, a South African colleague contacted me to help with getting her delayed Visa to travel to Nigeria approved.

    Unlike the first time she travelled to Nigeria early this year and promptly got her application approved, this time around, she is not sure what is causing the delay. She hinted that she was told it could be due to reported delays in Nigerians getting visas to South Africa for which the Immigration Service may be retaliating. Those who are very desperate to get their Visas are said to be allegedly bribing their way through, but she was not interested in taking that route.

    A colleague I contacted to assist with passing on the request of our South African colleague to the Immigration authorities noted that it was good that some South Africans are experiencing what Nigerians and other Nationals go through trying to get Visas to their country.

    According to him, South Africa is notorious for denying Nigerian applicants, including qualified persons visas and all efforts to make them change their ways have not been successful.

    While waiting to speak to the contact I was given at the Immigration headquarters, my colleague from South Africa sent me a message that she just called the Comptroller General who directed her to an officer and her application had been approved.

    I’m glad that my South African colleague got her Visa just by calling the Comptroller General, which should not have been the case since she has done the necessary documentation and paid, but as the person I contacted to reach Immigration noted, “We hope they (South Africa) can do the same for our people” if the need arises.

    I must admit that I know how difficult it can be for South Africans to sometimes get Visas to Nigeria apart from the delay in the instance above.

    While participating in a media fellowship programme for editors from Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya years ago, the Nigerian session of the programme had to be moved to Rwanda because our South African colleagues could not get visas on schedule as we did to their country. All the calls I made then to all concerned did not yield any response.

    There was no problem with getting a Visa to Kenya which seems to have a seamless pre or Visa on arrival procedure.

    While getting visas to countries outside the continent may understandably be tough, it should not be within the continent if we claim to be united.

    Curiously, it can sometimes be easier to get Visas to some foreign countries than trying to get one for an African country. A colleague currently in Tanzania told me how easy it was for him to get a Visa for an upcoming conference in Sweden rather than for getting to Tanzania.

    As long as people meet requirements, they should not go through harrowing experiences travelling to any country. If there is a genuine reason for their applications not to be granted, they should promptly be told so.

    Visa fees should not be unnecessarily high considering that the payment is not refundable as reasons for denial sometimes may not be justified.

    If we cannot offer Visa-free access to Africans like Seychelles, Benin and The Gambia, the process should be less stressful and expensive.

    African countries need to improve on their Visa Openness status which is about facilitating the free movement of people and getting more people mobile, to carry out their business easily, spontaneously, quickly, and with minimum cost.

    I agree with the Visa Openness Index Report by the Africa Development Bank that Visa openness is a vital step forward towards a more integrated Africa.

    There are indeed huge potential gains for countries and regions across Africa as the report states in having more visa-open policies for other Africans. It will help plug skills gaps in the labour market, promote entrepreneurship, diversify the economy, add value to services, or whether it is to attract investment and boost competitiveness.

  • Much ado about visa

    This is supposed to be a matter that ordinarily should not stir the public attention. But like many things Nigerian, official incompetence, especially in the form of dalliance, can cost the nation a lot.

    That is the story with the visa row between Nigeria and the United States. It is just a matter of reciprocity. The Nigerian government had imposed visa fees on the United States citizens, many of them also Nigerian. The United States, by the reciprocity agreement with Nigeria, decided to engage the Nigerian government. They did not immediately reciprocate by increasing their own visa fees on Nigerians.

    But there was dalliance, and a committee set up looked into it. A report was submitted, and this had taken too long, about 18 months between the increase and the decision by the United States embassy to hike their own fees.

    But the Nigerian government did not take an action to reduce the visa fee or reach an agreement. But once the U.S responded by jacking up the fees, panic took over the country’s government. It was first public relations disaster for the United States until the full story came into the public knowledge.

    Again, it is another instance of the sloppiness of the Nigerian state. First, why did the Nigerian government increase the fees without the consent of the United States embassy? This was an instance of the Nigerian government washing its dirty linen in the diplomatic public. It also fits into our ritual misnomer of flying in the face of due diligence.

    The frustration of the U.S. embassy was clear in its language: “After 18 months of review and consultations, the government of Nigeria has not changed its fee structure for U.S. citizens for certain visa categories.”

    How busy could the officials of the Ministry of Interior have been that they could not wrap up the issue that came into being early 2018? We may accuse them of lack of due diligence, or sloppiness, but we cannot take away the charge of official indolence.

    The visa issue did not frustrate only the American embassy. It also riled quite a few Nigerians who now have the American visa, but often travel home to visit and do business. But the bigger uproar also comes from Nigerians who visit and want to visit the United States for whatever matter. Nigerians have been paying fees to travel to other countries, and they complain over the fees, especially considering the economy. They feel the visa fees of other countries like Britain, Germany, France, and Canada do not reflect the cost of living in the country. It means our officials are negotiating away our fellow citizens’ purses.

    Whereas the Nigerian government wanted to increase its fees to rake in revenue, it should be aware that it has implications for its citizens. Many who travel to those countries are not necessarily rich. A good number of them are students whose parents are paying a lot already for fees and upkeep.

    But it is also commentary on how desperate we are as a nation to leave our shores, rather than stay at home where we can turn our meagre resources into wealth and peace. In South Africa, Nigerians are under siege with Xenophobic indigenes wasting our fellow citizens’ lives, properties and businesses.

    Even as we write this piece, the Nigerian government has not officially notified the American embassy of the decision to revert its fees to its old level. Mere announcement does not amount to policy, or diplomatic agreement.

    We expect that, in short order, the matter will be laid to rest and it will not be what it has been in the past week. That is, much ado about nothing.

     

  • Visa’s Andrew Torre reappointed to PAC-DBIA

    Andrew Torre, Visa Inc.’s (NYSE:  V) Regional President for Central and Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa has been reappointed to the President’s Advisory Council on Doing Business in Africa (PAC-DBIA), a U.S. private sector council which advises the President of the United States, through the Secretary of Commerce, on strengtheningU.S.-Africa commercial engagement. Torre was first appointed to the council in September 2016.

    “I have had the great privilege to work in Africa for many years and know it to be a diverse, energetic, and dynamic continent,” said Torre. “We believe that the fintech sector, coupled with African dynamism and entrepreneurship, will play a critical role in bringing sustainable and inclusive economic growth, and that companies like Visa can help increase the bonds of economic cooperation between the United States and African nations.

    “Our involvement in African economies can help attract more inward investment and stimulate local African businesses to export their ideas to the rest of the world. We want to be a catalyst for African innovation and growth, and a partner in helping to bring inclusive economic opportunity for everyone. This is why we are proud to participate in this important Advisory Council and look forward to continued cooperation with our U.S. and African partners.”

  • Visa urges more investment in cybersecurity

    American multinational financial services corporation, Visa Inc., has  urged financial institutions to continue investing in cybersecurity tools. Visa facilitates electronic funds transfers through its branded credit cards, gift cards, and debit cards.

    Its Head, Risk Management, West and Central Africa, Aribidesi Lawal, said though a lot has been done by the lenders and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in this respect, there is still much more to be done, adding that Visa as technology firm, has done a lot to make customers’ trust the platform for making and receiving payments and therefore, help to deepen the government’s cashless drive.

    Lawal, who spoke on “Securing the future of digital payments”, he said the firm has done a lot to curb both real and emerging threats in the payment industry. Aribidesi said security used to be synonymous with hindrance, innovation tools and solutions, but has stopped being so.

    Speaking on its free solutions to drive cashless payment and online transactions, he said the eCommerce Threat Disruption (eTD) scans the front-end of ecommerce merchant websites; identifies connection between malicious malware and merchant websites to combat growing e-commerce frauds.

    Another new tool is the Payment Attack Scenario Simulation (PASS), which he said, proactively tests known and hypothetical vulnerabilities to model and predict malicious behaviour; provide intelligence to remediate such vulneravbilities.

    While the Card Attack Tool (CAT) scores all card not present transactions to identify Bank Identification Number (BVN) testing attacks; Real-Time Attack Disruption (RAD) enables acquirer reporting and merchant suspension, Vital Signs enables Real-time ATM fraudulent cash-out monitoring, reporting and investigation for all VisaNet clients.

    On   fraud and authorisation insights and performance, Lawal said tools such as Visa Transaction Controls (VTC) for Consumers/Visa  Purchase Controls (VPC)  for P-Cards are on sale to customers.

    He said application programming interface (API) for issuers allows cardholders to track and manage all payment activities on enrolled accounts and tokens.

    Cardholders set purchase restrictions on an account use and request alerts on different payment activity/events, using their smartphone or computer, adding that it could be used for all brands and card types.