• Saturday, May 18, 2024
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Applicants yet to pick up 13,800 passports in Lagos – NIS

Some applicants for the Nigerian passport have not shown up to pick up their passports. Milka Musa, controller of the Lagos passport command of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) on Monday said that about 13 800, passports remained uncollected at the Lagos Passport offices.

Musa told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that about 12,300 were uncollected at the Ikoyi passport office, while 1500 were at the Festac office, adding that a-yet-to-be ascertained number of passports, also remained uncollected at the Ikeja passport office.

The passport controller appealed to applicants, who had applied in any of the passport offices before September 2021, to check their respective office of application for collection.

Read also: Explainer: What it costs to make a national passport

She further confirmed that the Passport Control Officer (PCO) in charge of each of the offices had sent text messages as a reminder to applicants concerned.

“ However, based on the volume of the uncollected passports, I believe the applicants had forgotten they applied for a passport. And these may be the category of applicants who were in haste when they came to apply.

“ The Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) is appealing to these applicants to come and collect their passports,” she said.

The controller further appealed to applicants to support the service in its operations, to enhance optimal service delivery, saying, “There are series of security checks that must be conducted on each applicant before the passport could be issued.

“Nigerians should stop being in haste when they come to apply for passports because the series of operations and security checks involved before issuance could not be carried out in seconds.

“The NIS, under the watch of the new Acting Control General of Immigration Service, (ACGIS), Idris Jere, would not relent in its efforts at providing super services to Nigerians,” Musa said.

She explained that the scarcity of passports witnessed earlier was caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, which had caused the world to stand still as ”all sectors were locked down”.

“However, when the lockdown was eased, what the NIS witnessed was a geometric growth in passport applications, she said.

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