The
British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Dr. Andrew Pocock, has said the
British government is reviewing its plan to introduce a £3,000 visa bond
scheme.
He also said while there were security concerns in Nigeria, they were not overwhelming in many respects and could be managed.
Pocock said this on Wednesday when he
visited the Nigerian Stock Exchange to ring the closing bell, and to
discuss ways in which more British companies could be encouraged to
invest in the nation’s capital market.
Reports had emerged earlier this year
that the British government was planning to implement a new scheme under
which some visitors from some Commonwealth countries, including
Nigeria, would be asked to pay a £3,000 cash bond in return for visitor
visas that allowed them to stay in the UK for up to six months.
“In the long run, we are interested in a
system of bonds that deters overstaying and recovers costs if a foreign
national has used our public services,” an unnamed Home Office official
had been quoted as saying in June.
The development had resulted in an
outcry by nationals of the affected countries with the Nigerian
government calling on its British counterpart to renounce the policy.
However, the British High Commissioner,
after ringing the closing bell at NSE in Lagos told journalists that,
“We have made it very clear to our government in London that there is
concern about this. So, this is being reviewed and considered in London
as we speak now.”
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