₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,328,987 members, 8,438,289 topics. Date: Friday, 03 July 2026 at 09:02 AM

Toggle theme

Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsChinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity (7790 Views)

1 Reply (Go Down)

Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by WithinCity(op): 10:32pm On Feb 26
Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity — Call for Independent Probe by Minister Tunji-Ojo

The recent revelations surrounding the five Chinese nationals; (Zhang Damou (46), Qian Jin (48), Tang Pan (41), Lin Jianfeng (52), and Guo Zhengheng 40) arrested in August 2025 at Royal Castle Ceramics Company Limited along the Sagamu Interchange in Ogun State have evolved from a seemingly straightforward immigration enforcement episode into a glaring indictment of systemic weaknesses in Nigeria's border control and regulatory apparatus.

What began as a joint sting operation by the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) and the Department of State Services (DSS) has morphed into a scandal marked by alleged deportations in October 2025, followed by suspiciously swift and unhindered re-entry into the country, with no visible prosecution, fines, or lasting consequences.

Several months after the initial arrests, critical questions remain unanswered and have only intensified amid fresh reports of the expatriates' quiet return. These individuals, reportedly affiliated with Hairun International Industry Company Limited and operating within the same facility, were accused of engaging in full-time factory roles; such as sales managers, business managers, and interpreters; without the requisite expatriate quota approvals, combined work and residence permits, or proper business registrations. Instead, they allegedly relied on Temporary Work Permits (TWPs) and Business Visas, visa categories explicitly prohibited for sustained, long-term employment in Nigerian industries under the Immigration Act.

The enforcement action at the time generated headlines and appeared to underscore a welcome shift toward stricter compliance under the current administration's immigration reform drive. Yet, the passage of over five months has revealed a troubling pattern: no public record of criminal prosecution, no disclosed administrative sanctions such as substantial fines or blacklisting, and no transparent communication regarding deportation or repatriation proceedings. More disturbingly, credible reports indicate that the five were allowed to depart Nigeria as ordinary outbound passengers; bypassing the formalities typically associated with deportation orders; only to re-enter the country shortly thereafter, apparently without fresh scrutiny or renewed documentation hurdles.

This sequence of events raises profound concerns about potential interference, selective enforcement, or outright procedural sabotage within the immigration bureaucracy. If the violations were substantiated; as initial findings suggested; why were standard deportation protocols under Section 44 of the Immigration Act seemingly circumvented? Were any overstaying fines, repatriation costs, or other statutory penalties imposed and duly recovered for the benefit of the Federal Government? What internal mechanisms permitted such a rapid turnaround, allowing individuals flagged for illegal work to resume operations almost seamlessly?

The Honourable Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, who oversees immigration matters, holds the primary responsibility to address this opacity. As the supervisory authority, he must immediately demand the full investigation file, including arrest records, evidence of violations, deportation documentation (or lack thereof), and any correspondence explaining the re-entry. Silence in the face of such high-profile scrutiny only fuels speculation of high-level lobbying, favoritism toward foreign investors, or institutional capture—perceptions that erode public trust at a time when Nigeria is pushing digital visa tracking, quota verification systems, and enhanced compliance oversight.

Operational accountability must also be enforced. The Assistant Comptroller General in charge of Investigation and Compliance, Idris Ozigi, bears direct responsibility for the enforcement division's outcomes, while Comptroller General Kemi Nana Nandap carries overarching leadership duty. Both must provide clear, public explanations of the actions—or inactions—taken post-arrest. If due process was rigorously followed, releasing redacted documentation would swiftly restore credibility. If lapses, irregularities, or external pressures intervened, an independent internal probe is essential, coupled with swift disciplinary measures against any officials found wanting.

This case is far more than an isolated incident at a ceramics factory in Sagamu. It serves as a litmus test for the integrity of Nigeria's immigration regime. Does enforcement apply uniformly across nationalities, or are certain foreign nationals—particularly those tied to significant investments—afforded preferential treatment? Are arrests merely performative gestures, or do they lead to genuine, lawful consequences? Is regulatory compliance negotiable for powerful corporate actors, or is it a non-negotiable pillar of national sovereignty?

Broader implications abound. Nigeria's ongoing immigration reforms—aimed at curbing illegal foreign labor, protecting local jobs, and ensuring foreign investments align with national laws—hinge on demonstrable accountability. When high-profile enforcement actions dissolve into ambiguity, they undermine the very reforms intended to modernize the system. Public confidence wanes, local workers feel sidelined in their own economy, and the rule of law appears selective.

To salvage institutional integrity and reaffirm that Nigeria's borders are not porous to the privileged few, the Minister of Interior should issue a decisive directive without delay: release and review the complete investigation file; launch an independent probe into the circumstances of the expatriates' exit and re-entry; verify and account for all applicable fines, penalties, or sanctions owed to the government; and implement corrective or disciplinary actions where enforcement protocols were breached.

Immigration governance thrives on transparency, not secrecy. Where arrests occur without visible, proportionate outcomes, the entire system's credibility hangs in the balance. In safeguarding national sovereignty, economic equity, and regulatory consistency, transparency is not a courtesy; it is an imperative. The time for answers is now; prolonged silence only deepens the damage.
https://thenationonlineng.net/chinese-expatriate-case-tests-nigerias-immigration-integrity-call-for-independent-probe-by-interior-minister-tunji-ojo/

Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by cooly419: 11:27pm On Feb 26
Baba wants to test himself.
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by tolugar: 11:28pm On Feb 26
Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity — Call for Independent Probe by Minister Tunji-Ojo
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by SixSeven: 11:36pm On Feb 26
Have we forgotten the trouble Fisayo abi what's that guy's name, Soyombo or something like that did on corruption in the sectorhuh If we had a serious Senate, they would have used that report to reform the system but let's just pretend like we dont know what we are doing in Nigeria.

How Nigerian Customs Smuggle Arms, Terrorist Motorcycles & Hard Drugs Into Nigeria - Fisayo Soyombo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BShHoxIznxg
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Dogalmighty17: 11:45pm On Feb 26
The Nigerian custom service gives the police a run for the worst government agency in this country. The only thing they are good at is pursuing rice smugglers who refuse to settle them. Ask yourself, how did all the illegal arms get into Nigeria? How did foreign mercenaries find their ways into the country to kill? How are imported illegal drugs all over the place? Because the Nigerian custom service is useless and actively sabotages the country.
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Bullhari: 11:49pm On Feb 26
Una go cry sha.


No be China again?
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by TheMensch(m): 1:16am On Feb 27
Minister of Passport wants to test Immigration undecided

What does that even mean?
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by cardoctor(m): 1:39am On Feb 27
These are the hard lessons we are yet to learn
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by ayoncox: 2:22am On Feb 27
If you fail in principles you will fail in processes and integrity test is just a waste of time until principles are effectively established. One of the principles is meritocracy then next will be transparency and accountability if they aren't enshrined first the integrity test is just a joke
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by aariwa(m): 2:46am On Feb 27
That’s the same Tunji Ojo they have been hyping shows Agbado knows nothing about governance and tinubu have led Nigeria 20 years backwards and managed to convince his supporters that he is not the problem but blames Peter Obi
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by SmartPolician: 4:18am On Feb 27
Nigeria get immigration? Dey play!!
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by ekukeku(m): 4:23am On Feb 27
Every sectors of d immigration is corrupt,

W all know dey r

But w r not ready to discuss it....

But wait dem use corruption swear for Nigeria...
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Franking: 5:03am On Feb 27
Are you mentioning integrity in the same sentence with Nigeria?

Let's quit pretending.....
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by DeltaBachelor(m): 5:43am On Feb 27
Chai. Nigeria continues to amaze me
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Gajagojo: 6:53am On Feb 27
Can we stop using this silly word

EXPATRIATE


Wetin be EXPATRIATE exactly

All those Ghanaians and Togolese are they EXPATRIATE too?

It is generally associated with inferiority complex

Nigerians in China do Chinese call them EXPATRIATE


All those una people wey Trump dey deport dem be EXPATRIATE?
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by grandstar(m): 7:25am On Feb 27
They actually lo9k like gentlemen. I hope they were not abusing workers.
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Ezmans: 7:29am On Feb 27
tolugar:
Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity — Call for Independent Probe by Minister Tunji-Ojo
the nation is the grand master of corruption containers lying down at port since late December no ship is coming
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Ezmans: 7:31am On Feb 27
tolugar:
Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity — Call for Independent Probe by Minister Tunji-Ojo
this nation is getting worst but to politicians it's getting better
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Fujiyama: 8:05am On Feb 27
This case throws up some questions that have long been asking for answers.

There are APC government supporters who take great joy in mocking critics when these critics complain about how broken the system is.

The government people then say things like "you are complaining while Chinese, British, Indian, Iranian, Russian, Lebanese, Pakistani, Saudi, American etc. 'businessmen' are 'making it' in the same country". undecided

The problem is that these 'businessmen' are precisely the sort of businessmen you don't want. They would never be able to thrive in an orderly country with laws and rules - and so they come to Nigeria where 'anything goes'. undecided

We await the results of an investigation into this specific case but we aren't holding our breath. We've heard this all before.

When those who know how to build functional systems warned Nigerians about building strong institutions instead of building strong men - we called them fools. Well, the outcomes are clear now.
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by showwiggy: 8:28am On Feb 27
aariwa:
That’s the same Tunji Ojo they have been hyping shows Agbado knows nothing about governance and tinubu have led Nigeria 20 years backwards and managed to convince his supporters that he is not the problem but blames Peter Obi
Did you read the write up?hatred hurts.
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Fujiyama: 8:40am On Feb 27
By the admission of one of his former ministers (Shittu Adebayo), Buhari was notorious for not holding his ministers accountable. There was no performance monitoring, no peer review mechanism, nothing - Buhari simply left his ministers to their own devices for eight long years. There was no 'law' as far as Buhari was concerned (when it came to his ministers), and as we all know, where there is no law, there is no sin. Under Buhari, ministers were routinely sworn in after the sham that our so called National Assembly conducts every now and then...the so called 'ministerial screening'. undecided After the charade in the Assembly, the ministers were then left to do exactly as they pleased.undecided Is it any surprise that the Buhari administration failed?

BAT is exactly the same as his predecessor in this regard. He has obstinately refused to reduce the size of his bloated cabinet (the largest in the country's history) and he has also refused to demand real accountability in any shape or form - apart from a few token gestures here and there. BAT is heading towards the end of his term and he has done nothing, absolutely nothing about critical, urgent public sector reform. undecided

The Oronsaye Report is over a decade old and some of its recommendations are no doubt out of date and have been long overtaken by events. But BAT has not even glanced (even if only perfunctorily) in that direction - apart from a half hearted 'directive'undecided in 2024 to 'implement' the Report. Has anyone felt the impact of implementation so far? Of course not.

What we have instead is the provocation of BAT's tired sloganeering and dog eared tales of his 'courage' and 'boldness' in eliminating fuel import subsidies - as if the country's problems can be reduced to a fuel pump head in a fuel station.undecided Meanwhile, Nigerians are now being assailed with incredible news reports (by the AFP) of multi-billion Naira ransom payments recently made by the federal government to terrorists and bandits - for the release of kidnap victims.undecided What is this?

BAT wasn't the right choice for this job. He wasn't and he still isn't. There is almost no difference between him and his predecessor. They are men who are not ready to spearhead the far reaching structural changes this country desperately needs - and they also are not ready to even reform the processes that underpin the current flawed structure. So what's the point of their government? undecided

In the end its up to Nigerians. They and only they can decide.
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Denalarian: 9:14am On Feb 27
What is immigration? Do we have border patrol? Lol..
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by aariwa(m): 8:52pm On Feb 27
showwiggy:
Did you read the write up?hatred hurts.
And the hatred for yourself continues to hurt you
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by fxexperts: 7:48am On Feb 28
aariwa:
That’s the same Tunji Ojo they have been hyping shows Agbado knows nothing about governance and tinubu have led Nigeria 20 years backwards and managed to convince his supporters that he is not the problem but blames Peter Obi
So do not tell me you are going to use this same sense to cross road oo.. If we check maybe you or your father or any of your relatives are the ones working in this passport/immigration office issuing illegal visas to these Chinese people.

TheMensch:
Minister of Passport wants to test Immigration undecided

What does that even mean?
That is is job. some of you just talk anyhow.
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Meteng: 11:21am On Feb 28
These type of cases abound plenty in this country. E no go dey far from bribery and corruption
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Tomson1: 8:05pm On Mar 02
I think investigation should be carried with suspicions and dubious Chinese nationals. Their dealings has no direct connection with HM interior.
Re: Chinese Expatriate Case Tests Nigeria’s Immigration Integrity by Zeesugar(f): 8:21pm On Mar 02
If we keep overlooking somethings we won't grow as a nation. The those guys to re-enter Nigeria successfully it means lots it's involved as such it is only wise to investigate with all diligence and blacklist the Chinese guys.
1 Reply

Tinubu’s UK State Visit Tests Nigeria’s Diplomacy Beyond CeremonyGunmen Kill Policeman, Kidnap Chinese Expatriate In OyoCOVID 19. Anambra Index Case Tests Negative.234

Nigeria Needs Leaders Who Think Before Talking – APC Knocks Peter Obi Over PortsBehold Nigeria’s Silver Spoons In The North! (Part 1)Fashola Visits Family Of Late Guardian Publisher: Consoler in chief. Pics