THE change  agenda of President Muhammadu Buhari has received positive reviews so  far from the United States of America. Many American businesses appear  ready to take a chance again on Nigeria. But some are beginning to  develop cold feet so soon because many tales on Nigeria are still very  emblematic of the inept shadow of the immediate past regime.
Perhaps, many factors contribute to the bad image, but none has been  more annoying than the case of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS).  For example, the process of obtaining ordinary Nigerian Visa or Passport  defies common sense. The primary headache is Innovate 1 Services, a  company contracted during the past regime by the NIS to process  passport/ Visa applications. Quite frankly, it is not an overstatement  to quip that the old NEPA was by far more efficient. At least,  Nigerians could easily relate to the voices at the then NEPA. Put  differently, besides the prevailing challenges at the Innovate 1  Services, the contractor also has the audacity to outsource the few jobs  from a critical component of Nigerian national security to our Indian  friends whose relentless brawl with the English language makes a typical  Nigerian sound like an Englishman. Yet, millions of our highly  qualified citizens roam the streets home and abroad in search of any  kind of job.
Make no mistake about it, many would care less if the Innovate 1  Services and its “Oyibo” staff could provide the desired service. There  are issues with web technology, applications, method of payment,  customer service, and what have you. Attorney Stefano Fabeni, the  Executive Director, Global Initiatives for Human Rights at Heartland  Alliance in Washington , DC , had a first-hand experience and was able  to tweet the matter exactly how it is “Applying for #Nigerian visa with  Innovate 1 services is a nightmare. They should NOT be allowed to  operate in the US.”
As a foreigner, Fabeni’s harrowing account was on Visa, but the  passport process for our citizens in the USA is even worse. Not only do  these fellow Nigerians have to grapple with the Innovate 1 Services  system, those who live outside the regions where the embassies or  consulates are located incur costs of an average of $1,000 to obtain a  common passport. To mitigate the costs, the Nigerian Embassy designed an  intelligible intervention program whereby passport services are  entertained in major cities outside the consulates. However, apart from  a potpourri of unprintable details, the intervention program itself is  fraught with two daunting challenges. First, the exercise is extremely  time-consuming in a country where time matters most. The reason offered  for this failure is that each consulate office in the USA is equipped  with only two Immigration bio-data capturing machines. To that end, a  consulate can only afford to lend one machine for interventions, and  understandably so, since the other machine must remain at the consulate  for its normal operations. Second, the consulate does not seem to have  the desired number of staff to contain the type of volume usually  generated from the passport interventions.
A good case in point is a recent passport intervention conducted  from February 19 through 22, 2016 in Houston by the Nigerian Consulate  in Atlanta. Over 1,000 Nigerians applied and showed up at the venue.  Although the consulate staff had to work over 15 hours per day, only  less than 400 of the applications were captured by the lone machine.
The majority had to go home dispirited, wondering why simple things  are made difficult once associated with their native country. And you  cannot fault the frustrations. In attempt to obtain ordinary passports,  these fellow Nigerians had to take off from work to queue in line for  days only to come out empty. Even when the passports are finally  processed, it takes 4 to 8 weeks before they are received by the  applicants.
The most mind-boggling is that Nigeria does not have a permanent  consular post in the Texas/Oklahoma region. For those unfamiliar with  American geography, the area in review is similar in size to the entire  Nigeria and features big cities, such as Dallas , San Antonio, Austin  and Oklahoma City . More notably, the area includes Houston , a city  recognized by the US State Department as boasting the largest  concentration of Nigerians in America . Moreover, Houston is the energy  capital of the world with a hive of Oil & Gas businesses  tailor-made for Nigerian investment.
Buhari’s vision on foreign investment requires a holistic  approach—targeting foreigners as well as Nigerians in the Diaspora. It  does not require a clairvoyant to discern that these Diaspora-based  Nigerians, who have been remitting home an average of $21 billion per  year, actually hold the key to foreign investment into our country. To  start with, they are highly vested in the different nations and serve as  unsung ambassadors in their respective fields. Furthermore, most of  them are nearing the retirement age and are pondering whether to invest  at home or abroad. Best of all, their foreign-born children, most of who  are also highly placed in different societies, are naturally eager to  explore opportunities in the African country. Yet, while their parents  might have been used to the “Nigerian factor”, the younger generation  expects better.
The way forward is not too complicated. The change agenda of  President Buhari must also be rooted in the government agencies that  implement his policies. This case requires professionalizing, without  any delay, the NIS services in the United States of America in line with  international best practices.
Very importantly, the government should ensure that the Nigerian  consulates in the USA are strategically located, easily accessible, and  fully equipped with adequate and competent staff, the desired number of  bio-data capturing machines, and ready passport/visa booklets. First  impression truly matters. The very few who venture to explore  opportunities in Nigeria ought to have good stories to tell, beginning  from the processes of traveling to the country.
SUN
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