The federal government says the passport application
processing time by the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) will now take six
weeks.
Rauf Aregebesola, minister of interior, said this is to
ensure a seamless, transparent operation, as well as “accord human dignity to
applicants and fulfil citizenship integrity in line with the mandate of the
ministry”.
The minister stated this at a meeting with Muhammed Babandede,
comptroller-general of NIS; passport officers, as well as attaches in Nigerian
missions abroad, held at the immigration headquarters in Abuja, on Thursday.
According to a statement by Towoju Raphael, senior information officer at the ministry of interior, Aregbesola said it has become imperative to review the ministry’s operations and rejig its system in order to offer excellent services to clients.
“A timeline will be
fixed for every application i.e., a collection date. This will be six weeks,
comparable to what obtains in other countries,” Aregbesola said.
“This is to allow for enough time to investigate and
validate personal information supplied by the applicants.
“What we are driving at is the peace of mind that comes from
the assurance of certainty. If there are circumstances that will make the date
change, it will be communicated to the applicant one week before the collection
date.
“Applicants will have
no basis for further communication with officers, other than to complete their
application process and leave the venue. The date for the collection of their
passports or any challenge to the application will be communicated to them. The
technology for the efficient running of this system has been acquired and will
be deployed.”
The minister also added that the NIS will publish a list of
the backlog of applications that are ready, which have not been collected by
the owners.
“They will be required to go to the state commands to
collect them,” he added.
Aregbesola also said efforts are on to embed security
operatives both “seen and unseen” in all passport offices.
“We have had several
challenges in the past, including shortage of booklets, touting, racketeering,
inflating the cost, passports being issued to ineligible persons, among
others,” he said.
“They will wear body cameras. They will detect and report
any form of solicitations, inflation, improper communications, extortion,
diversion, hoarding and other corrupt practices. Those caught will be dealt
with according to the law.”
The minister said an ombudsman will also be created for
members of the public to receive complaints and reports on officers trying to
deviate from prescribed guidelines and subversion of the process.
“Therefore, I am declaring a zero-tolerance stance to all
forms of touting. No applicant will be made to pay any illegitimate fees,” he
said.
In March, the federal government had unveiled the express
passport processing centre of the NIS.
The centre, dubbed the “premium passport processing centre”,
is expected to cater to Nigerians seeking to obtain their passports within a
maximum of 72 hours.
Advertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users
No comments
Post a Comment
Kindly drop a comment below.
(Comments are moderated. Clean comments will be approved immediately)
Advert Enquires - Reach out to us at NigerianEye@gmail.com