• Monday, September 16, 2024
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Minister decries $35,000 business registration fee for Nigerians in Egypt

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Lai Mohammed, Minister of Information and Culture

Nigeria’s minister of information and culture, Lai Mohammed has decried the $35,000 (about N19.2 million) deposit being requested by the Egyptian authorities from foreigners, including Nigerians to operate a business enterprise in that country.

Mohammed described the condition as unacceptable during a meeting with the Nigerian community in Cairo.

The meeting was on the sideline of a bilateral discussion with Africa Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) on how Nigeria can access funding to support its growing creative industry.

Mohammed had led some private sector stakeholders involved in Digital Switch Over (DSO) to Afreximbank to assist them on how they can source fund to complete the wholly private sector financially driven project.

At the meeting organised by the Nigerian ambassador to Egypt, Nura Rimi, the minister said such a condition negates the unity that bound African countries together.

He, therefore, promised to take the matter up with the minister of foreign affairs, Geoffrey Onyema and other relevant bodies upon his return to Nigeria.

The minister also decries the high number of Nigerian children out of school in Egypt owing to language barrier and non-availability of registered Nigerian schools in Cairo.

The Nigerian community had told the minister that the official language for teaching in Egypt is Arabic and the few private schools being run by the British and America in that country were exorbitant.

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They said no fewer than 7,000 Nigerian children in Egypt were out of school and therefore appealed for construction of a Nigerian school in Cairo. They also told the minister that because many of them could not afford the mandatory 35,000 dollars deposit, their businesses had been labelled illegal while they were subjected to regular harassment and arrest by Egyptian security officials.

Meanwhile, the minister has appealed to the Nigerian community in Egypt to disregard most of the negative news about Nigeria, especially on social media.

According to him, most of the news being received abroad about Nigeria are fake news, the country is at peace and the people are living harmoniously.

“There is no country without its challenges, we are facing our own just like Egypt did some years back and they are out of it now.

“In Nigeria, we have the challenge of banditry, Boko Haram, and militants but that does not mean that Nigeria is at war.

“Nigeria in the last six years has been making tremendous developmental progress in infrastructure development, agriculture, aviation and other fields of endeavour.

“Unfortunately, the noise of the mischief-makers have drowned the laudable success of the administration

“I want to assure you here that whatever problem we have in Nigeria has nothing to do with religion or ethnicity,” he said.

The minister stressed that in spite of the security and economic challenges President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration was facing, it recorded tremendous achievements in many areas.

He listed some of the giant strides of the administration in roads, bridges, rail infrastructure as well as in agriculture, particularly self-sufficiency in rice.

The minister of women affairs and social development, Paulen Talen also made a presentation at the event.