NIS Explains Delay In Issuance Of International Passport

Nigerian passports
Nigerian passports

The Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) has provided an explanation for the two-year wait in the granting of passports to Nigerians.

The COVID-19 epidemic, according to NIS spokesperson Amos Okpu, was a significant setback in the creation and processing of the travel document.

Mr. Okpu announced this during a PREMIUM TIMES weekly Twitter space.

“The COVID-19 19 affected operations, we didn’t shut down, and people still had access to make payments. When the space got open we had surplus applications,” he said.

“We have to treat them but no real production was going (on) across industries and passport production was not an exception,” he added.

He, however, said the NIS has started addressing the backlog.

“We have had an upsurge of applications during and after the covid. We need some time to stabilise the system. We are not happy about it, we are addressing the situation,” he emphasised.

He continued by saying that due to outdated technology, some of the materials required to make the passports are not imported.

He claimed that officers of the service now work on weekends to make sure the backlog is cleared as part of measures to ensure that passports are distributed.

The NIS official also lamented cases of poor documentation on the part of applicants.

“Documentation is a challenge, sometimes phone numbers of applicants don’t exist. When we send bulk SMS to applicants, some don’t receive it because of wrong documentation,” he said.

“Some of the agents put their numbers in place of those of the applicants, it’s usually difficult to get across to them,” he said.

READ ALSO: Aregbesola: Sufficient Passport Booklets Distributed Nationwide To Address Backlog

In response to the question of enhanced passports in some areas, he noted that the NIS chose to migrate to an enhanced passport and decided to follow a pattern or procedure to prevent confusion after reviewing the situation in 2017.

“We don’t have the technology. No time frame. We apologise and bear a little with us. It is not a hopeless situation. It’s a work in progress,” he said.

He urged Nigerians to interrogate poor service deliveries by officers of the service.

“When an officer is asking for something against the law, we expect you to interrogate it. Raise it to a higher officer,” he said.

Earlier, Nigeria’s Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, had said that there is no passport booklet shortage in Nigeria, as all backlogs had been cleared.

“In 2021 alone, we provided 1.3 million passports to Nigerians. As of today, there is no booklet shortage in Nigeria,” he said.

“As of the second quarter of 2022, the NIS has provided 645,000 passports out of the 750,000 applications received.

“To address the challenge of the backlog, we have sent 11,000 booklets to Ikoyi, 11,000 to Alausa and 8,000 to FESTAC centres in Lagos State. We have also sent sufficient booklets to all the centres nationwide to address this challenge,” the minister had said.

According to him, 10,000 passport booklets had been deployed to the new Port Harcourt passport production centre, to fasten passport issuance in the state.