Monday 16 September 2013

British Deputy Prime Minister, Nick Clegg To Stop Proposed £3,000 For Nigerian Visitors To The U.K



Hope rose yesterday for Nigerian first time visitors to the United Kingdom, who may be affected by the planned introduction of £3,000 (about N700,000, (visa bond as British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg vowed to block the implementation of the policy.
The British Government plans a new visa policy that will see some “high risk” first time visitors deposit £3,000 in bond before being given visas.
The deposit will be refunded on departure from the UK within the stipulated period but forfeited if the applicant overstays the visa.
The pilot project is planned to start in November in six countries, including Nigeria where there has been outrage from the government and the people.
Some lawmakers have even urged the Federal Government to consider a retaliatory approach should the UK go ahead with the bond policy.
The other countries targeted for the pilot scheme are Ghana, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
Clegg said yesterday he would try to block any attempt to make foreign visitors routinely pay a security deposit to come to the U.K.
Officials and business people in other affected countries have condemned the proposal, and the British government has not said how many visa applicants will have to pay the bond.
Clegg said his Liberal Democrat party and its Conservative coalition partners had “differences of emphasis” on the plan, and details were still being discussed in government.
“I am absolutely not interested in a bond which becomes an indiscriminate way of clobbering people who want to come to this country,” Clegg told the BBC. He said the bonds “are certainly not going to go ahead” on that basis.
“Of course in a coalition I can stop things,” he added.
Immigration is a sensitive political issue in Britain, especially with the unemployment and austerity measures brought on by the economic crisis. Prime Minister David Cameron has pledged to cut net immigration from 252,000 a year in 2010 to below 100,000 a year by 2015.


3 comments:

  1. This is clearly discrimination they should find a better way to solve their immigration problem. After all they colonized us, Why do Nigerians need visa to visit the UK?!

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  2. They had better stop that bond for their own good.

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  3. I think say them no dey fear!they no they our stolen money to survive na..foolish ppl

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