Senate moves to probe alleged $2, 000 hike in residence permit for foreigners

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The Nigerian Senate will prove the hike in the annual residence permit for foreigners from 1, 000 dollars to 2, 000 dollars by Continental Transfert Technique Ltd, CONTEC.

Chairman, Senate Committee on Finance,  Sen. Solomon Adeola, made this known during a joint public hearing by his committee and that of National Planning on Wednesday.

The hearing is on the 2021 to 2023 Medium Term Expenditure Framework, MTEF, and Fiscal Strategy Plan, FSP.

The Comptroller-General Nigeria Immigration Service, NIS, Muhammad Babande, appeared before the committee during the interactive session.

The CONTEC is a company that was in a Private-Public Partnership with the Ministry of Interior.

The company had increased the permit from 1, 000 dollars to 2, 000.

Adeola stressed the need for a more elaborate investigation on the issue with a view to tackling it.

“We will take enough information and after the consideration of MTEF/ FSP, the committee will come up with a proper investigation into the revenue sources of the NIS,” he said.

Contributing, Sen. Ayo Akinyelure (PDP-Ondo) alleged that the NIS officials were frustrating the activities of CONTEC,  by preventing them from collecting an accurate fee from the expatriates as a residence permit.

He said:  “We have more than 15 million immigrants in the country. As we speak,  only less than 20 per cent of are captured.

“They are collecting money through the backdoor. We need to invite the minister of interior, the consultants, and the NIS,” he said.

In his submission, Babandede said that the service generated its revenue from issuances of passport and visas,  control and entry of persons in and out of the country.

“All these revenues are generated under PPP which was signed before the coming of this administration,  between the ministry of interior and technical partners.

“So the sharing formula of this PPP differs greatly; but in general terms, this revenue is accrued in favour of the technical partners and government itself,” he said.

Babandede further explained that immigration officers were not preventing the CONTEC from collecting permit fees from expatriates.

“And if there are cases where some NIS officers are blocking them, it is a good idea because the CONTEC is not doing the country any good.

“Nobody should defend the company which took Nigeria to court and wanted to seize our property,  including our mission and NNPC building.

“They took us to the United Kingdom Arbitration Court where we were forced to pay N8 billion. As far as we are concerned, this company has no value for Nigeria.

“The company increased the permit rate to 2, 000 dollars and reviewed the sharing formula downward but the arrangement still favour them.

” Fifty-five per cent of the 2, 000 dollars is higher than the 72 per cent of the 1, 000 dollars they were collecting before.

“We have already petitioned the EFCC to explain our disapproval of the arbitrary fee hike.

“However, the Ministry of Justice is doing something about it because there is no justification for the increment.

“The NIS is already discussing with the ministry of justice for necessary advice on the legal implications of the upward review of the resident permit fee from 1, 000 to 2, 000 dollars.

“The Ministry of Justice is already looking at the modalities to pull out of the arrangement,” Babandede said.

Meanwhile, the committee has summoned the NIS boss and the Minister of Interior, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola to appear before it on Thursday.