There is palpable anger and disappointment among Nigerians who
have gained admission to British universities for the upcoming academic
session. Students already in UK institutions are also unhappy about a
new ‘visa bond’ scheme to be implemented against ‘high risk’ visitors by
the David Cameron administration.
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The measure has already sown confusion among British admission agencies
in Nigeria, who have worked hard to convince wealthy Nigerians to send
their children to universities in the UK, and has thrown students
interested in studying in the UK into a quandary.
The new visa scheme will impose £3,000 (about N780,000) in charges on
unspecified visa applicants thought to be ‘high risk visitors’ from
Nigeria, Ghana, Bangladesh, India and Pakistan.
The Nigerian government has since threatened retaliatory measures if
London goes ahead with the ‘refundable’ but unpopular visa bond.
According to diplomatic sources in Abuja, Nigeria’s federal capital, the
visa pilot scheme was proposed by the British intelligence service MI6
and British police headquarters at Scotland Yard.
Both are reportedly worried that some foreign students who apply for
visas to study in British universities have developed, in their home
countries, ideas and determination to commit terrorism on British soil.
In Nigeria, the visa bond is believed to be a subtle way of ensuring
that students who are labelled as ‘high risk’ know that they will be
targets of intelligence surveillance while they are studying at British
universities.
A diplomat, who did not want to be named, explained that Ghana had been
included on the ‘high risk’ country list because its airport and
seaports were thought to be avenues for Latin American drug cartels, who
use some Ghanaian students as drug couriers.
The same diplomat said that some students from Nigeria, Pakistan, India
and Bangladesh had been involved in terrorism in Britain.
He cited the examples of Umar Farouk Abdulmuttalab, a Nigerian and
former student of University College London, who tried to blow up an
American plane in December 2009, and student Michael Adebolajo, a
Nigerian-born Briton, who recently hacked a British soldier to death.
“The British government is convinced that the use of visa bond may go a long way to make Britain safe,” the diplomat said.
The diplomat also revealed that the visa bonds would be extended to some
non-students thought to be high risk, and hinted that British embassies
might collaborate with local intelligence services in collecting
evidence on some visa applicants.
Justifications for the special bond have not been made public by the
British Council or the British High Commission in Nigeria. Efforts by
the Nigerian media and civil society organizations to get these agencies
to comment on the scheme failed. It has been reported that the British
government informed embassies to be silent on the issue.
Nigerian parents have approached officials to find out if children who
have been admitted to UK universities through reputable agencies will be
affected by the new visa regulation, but the officials have not been
forthcoming.
As a precautionary measure, many parents have instructed Nigerian banks
to suspend, for now, sending tuition and accommodation fees to British
universities.
Parents have advanced three reasons for their action.
First, the payment of the special visa bond is an additional financial
burden on them in difficult economic times: “How will I sustain my three
children admitted to study in British universities? It means that I
have to pay an additional US$15,000 for my three children outside
tuition and other expenses,” said Akin Olusola, an accountant who
studied in the UK.
Second, some parents are now contemplating sending their children to other countries if Britain does not rescind the bond.
Third, parents have said they are concerned that being declared a ‘high
risk’ visitor will affect their children for life. “This special bond
may be a permanent stigma for my child in this world of computerised
intelligence data,” said Edith Mustapha, an oil company engineer.
“How will my child explain to her future employers that she was placed
on a high risk visitor’s visa when she was a student in Britain?”
Professor Tunde Ikotun, vice-chancellor of South Western University in
Okun Owa, in Ogun State, is vehemently opposed to the visa scheme. A
former postgraduate Ford Foundation scholar in plant pathology at
Imperial College in London, he is of the opinion that the British
government should not classify students as high risk.
“One of the outstanding achievements of Britain is giving foreign
students access to her excellent tertiary education. Yes, few students
may be denied the visa. But this new visa scheme should be discarded. It
places a moral and financial burden on parents,” he said.
Femi Shaka, a professor of film studies at the University of Port
Harcourt and former postgraduate student at the University of Warwick in
the UK, is of the view that the visa bond will be counterproductive.
“This discriminatory visa may scare away students from British
universities where about 20,000 Nigerians are studying; the largest
foreign student group after China and India”, he said.
Also, Olugbenga Ashiru, Nigeria’s foreign minister, has described the
visa bond as selective and discriminatory. He has warned that Nigeria
will retaliate if it is implemented. Sources said the government might
impose visa bonds of £5,000 on Britons visiting Nigeria.
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