Health World News

Foreigners without COVID-19 certificate will lose visas, says NIS

The Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Immigration Service, Muhammed Babandede, has warned that foreign visitors who failed to present their COVID-19 test certificates on arrival in the country will have their visas revoked.

Speaking at the weekly briefing of the Presidential Task Force on COVID-19 in Abuja on Tuesday, Babandede assured that the 100 travellers under a travel ban for flouting the mandatory seven-day post-arrival COVID-19 polymerase chain reaction test cannot obtain fresh passports or compromise the NIS officers, adding that the system was automated and cannot be bypassed or manipulated.

Babandede stated, “The public health is a big issue in the country and so based on that directives, we have complied by blocking 100 passports from travelling, which means, even if they go to the police and declare those passports missing, they cannot be reissued anywhere in the world and they cannot cross our national borders until the period of six months or communication received from the right authorities stating that they have complied.

“This will also include non-Nigerians; we have the powers to revoke visas, even the comptroller-general has the power to revoke visas. “

The NIS boss said based on the powers he had and the additional conditions for entering the country, every visitor must have the COVID-19 test result.

Babandede said some of the individuals under the travel restrictions had been calling him for help, adding that he simply asked them to comply with the regulations.

Related posts

Nigerian doctors practising abroad regretting action, says MDCN

Editor

11 die, 90 fall sick after eating temple food in India – Police

Editor

UK PM Johnson stable, receiving standard oxygen treatment – Spokesperson

Nigeria’s COVID-19 cases rise by 206, discharge 23, zero death — NCDC

Shile GIWA

NMA supports FG, Senate on move to ban syringe importation 

Our Reporter

Soludo calls for collective response in tackling poverty, healthcare in Nigeria

By Kunle SHONUGA