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Old Nigerian Passport Still Valid - Read Breaking News! by gozizi: 4:01pm On Oct 04, 2007
BREAKING NEWS!!! Thursday 4th October 2007

Following the reported harrowing experience by Nigerians at foreign embassies over the newly introduced e-passport, the Comptroller-General of the Nigerian Immigrations Service (NIS), Mr. Chukwurah Joseph Udeh, has debunked the stories making round that the present Nigerian passport is no longer valid.

He said both the readable passport and the e-passports will be used side-by-side until 2010.

Udeh expressed displeasure with the development, insisting that the old passport, which has been subjected to various abuses, would be phased out gradually.

He said that the hiccups experienced by the public in obtaining the e-passport was as a result of the suppliers not being able to supply the data sheets that were needed initially for the processing of the electronic passport.

He also said that the wrong impression created by some embassies was also responsible for the high demand of the travelling document.

The three-year span for phasing out the old travelling documents is to avoid any sort of rush.

He said Federal Executive Council, in its determination to ensure the service completely eliminate fraud in passport acquisition, has approved the deployment of 147 auto gates to all border entry points across the country for the success of the biometric passport.
The electronic passport which came into effect on July 27, 2007 has generated negative reactions from cross sections of Nigerian applicants.

Applicants have complained bitterly about the tortuous application process and the time factor—from the commencement of the application process to the issuance of the travelling document.

NIS, on its part, anchored the complaints on the novel nature of the passport and the impatience of applicants, disclosing that the objective was to restore the dignity of the Nigerian passport.

Udeh said that despite the shortcomings, the e-passport has come to stay. The agency, he said, is making significant progress and by January, the problem would have been resolved.

Udeh said the e-passport is the solution to the abuse furred by the old document, which has become a source of embarrassment to Nigerians who had been subjected to a series of ridicule especially at the points of entry abroad.

Listing the advantages of the e-passport, he said that with the security features of the e-passport, it would be difficult for anyone to use another person’s travelling document. This, he said, is as a result of the uniqueness of the e-document that is tied to the holder’s personality.
Re: Old Nigerian Passport Still Valid - Read Breaking News! by Horus(m): 10:07pm On Nov 08, 2007
Nigeria: E-Passport Challenges
Lagos
2 November 2007

THE Nigerian Immigration Service, NIS, faces the teething problems of change, as it moves from the outdated manual manner in which it has conducted its affairs into the electronic sphere.
Nowhere has the challenges manifested more than the issuance of the electronic passport, the new travel document that would restore the dignity of the Nigerian traveler.
The only business many Nigerians have with the NIS is over passports, unless they are business people, who require expatriate quotas for their organisations. Passport administration is the ultimate platform Nigerians use to judge the NIS .
The transition from the machine readable passports, currently in use, to e-passports has been fraught with many speculations, resulting mostly from the fact that the NIS did not have the resources to handle the deluge of demands for the e-passports once they were introduced.
A logjam resulted which the NIS has managed by opening more e-passport centres (more are planned) and extending the date for phasing out the old passports to 2010.
Yet, the NIS deserves commendation for introducing the technologically advanced e-passport, which adequately tackles the problems of multiple applications, passport thefts and fake passports. Every passport captures the personal data of the applicant, in addition to storing these in a central data base, which raises an alarm if the same applicants make fresh applications for passports.
The central data base is one of the new dimensions of the e-passport.
Personal data are electronically embedded in the passport and are invisible to the eye. The appropriate reading machine deciphers the date. Pages of the e-passport are tamper-proof, unlike the easily forged machine readable passports that are being phased out. If for any reasons someone is able to replace the pages, the machines can detect the fraud.
The challenges of the e-passport include the capacity of the NIS to make them available to millions of travellers who immediately want to be beneficiaries of the better treatment its holders get abroad. The NIS ' insistence on online applications has been criticised as out of touch with the country's literacy level and availability of information technology facilities.
NIS admits these challenges. It is sticking to online application because it enhances the fidelity of the process, captures revenue promptly, and leaves no room for the racketeering and touting that were associated with passport administration.
The NIS argues that since all arrangements for international travels (ticketing, inoculations and visas) are conducted in the urban areas, e-passport applicants would not bear any extraordinary burdens.
As the NIS grapples with the challenges of modernising its operations, including more effective policing of the borders, electronic recruitment and pay roll, its successes are sterling examples of better ways of conducting even government business.
Governments should align their processes to the information age for global compatibility and relevance.

Source: http://allafrica.com/stories/200711020319.html

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