THE
Federal Government on Tuesday insisted on retaliatory action against
British citizens if their government went ahead with its plan to
impose a £3, 000 visa bond on visitors from Nigeria and five other
Commonwealth countries.
It expressed displeasure that Downing
Street, which had already set November as the discriminatory policy’s
commencement time, had not deemed it neccessary to formally communicate
to it on the next step of action.
The Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru, had at a meeting with the British High
Commissioner, Andrew Pocock, conveyed the desire of Nigeria to retaliate
the policy.
The spokesperson for the ministry ,
Ogbole Ode, said in a statement in Abuja, that the British authorities
were already aware of the Federal Government’s position on the matter.
The statement reads, “Media reports in
Nigeria on Monday, July 29, 2013, indicated that the United Kingdom
Government will begin to implement from November, 2013, the £3,000 cash
bond for first-time visa applicants from Nigeria, and five other
Commonwealth countries. The other countries are India, Kenya, Sri Lanka,
Pakistan, and Bangladesh. These media reports themselves were quoting
the Financial Times of London.
“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has yet
to receive any official communication on the final decision of the UK
government on this matter. The Federal Government has already conveyed
its objection to the bond payment to the UK government. This was done
when the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Ashiru, summoned the
British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Mr. Andrew Pocock, to the Tafawa
Balewa House, on June 25, 2013.
“If and when a communication to that
effect is received, the Federal Government will take appropriate steps
to reflect its national interest. ”
When contacted, the spokesman for the
British High Commission in Abuja, Rob Fitzpatrick, said, “No final
decision has been made” on the controversial policy.
He said, “As British Prime Minister
David Cameron has said, we want the brightest and the best to help
create the jobs and growth that will enable Britain to compete in the
global race. So, for example, if you are an overseas businessman seeking
to invest and trade with world class businesses, one of the thousands
of legitimate students keen to study at our first-class universities or a
tourist visiting our world class attractions, be in no doubt: Britain
is open for business.”
It will be recalled that Ashiru, at the
meeting with Pocock, warned that the government would retaliate the
discriminatory policy.
On Monday the British government defended a campaign advising illegal immigrants to “go home or face arrest.”
Two trucks, each displaying a large
poster with a number for migrants to send text messages if they
desired to return to their countries , were seen in six London
boroughs for a week.
It was learnt that posters, leaflets and
advertisements in newspapers would run for a month to further
promote the campaign, a pilot scheme by the interior ministry.
A member of the Liberal Democrat Party,
the junior partner in the coalition government with the
Conservative Party and Business Secretary, Vince Cable, called the
campaign “stupid and offensive.”
The opposition Labour Party’s home affairs spokeswoman, Yvette Cooper, also said the scheme was “ludicrous.”
But Prime Minister David Cameron’s
spokesman defended the campaign, saying it was clear that it was
“already working” as some illegal immigrants had voluntarily agreed
to leave the UK.culled from Punch
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