Tag: Work permits

  • Nigeria’s expired-visa amnesty: what September 30 means—and what happens after

    Nigeria’s expired-visa amnesty: what September 30 means—and what happens after

    Photo Credit: Facebook
    2025-12-28 09:00:00

    According to the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), the Expired Visa Initiative (Amnesty) provides a window for foreigners who overstayed or violated visa conditions to regularise their immigration status before penalties apply.

    NIS says the initiative targets holders of expired Visa-on-Arrival and other expired entry visas, alongside wider compliance under Nigeria’s evolving visa regime.

    After the deadline, enforcement mechanisms—including fines and re-entry restrictions—are expected to tighten for non-compliant residents and sponsors.

    NIS states the grace period “extends until 30th September 2025,” while Vanguard quoted an NIS spokesperson saying the scheme “runs until September 30 2025.”

    Echotitbits take: For businesses and diaspora-linked employers, the key is audit-and-regularise now—especially for visiting staff and dependents. Watch for post-amnesty enforcement and any new portal-driven compliance checks.

    Source: Nigeria Immigration Service — July 2025 (https://immigration.gov.ng/expired-visa-holders/

  • UK extends visas for foreign prison staff as Nigerian workers avoid a sudden cut-off

    UK extends visas for foreign prison staff as Nigerian workers avoid a sudden cut-off

    Photo credit: Sky News — Flag of the United Kingdom:

    2025-12-20 12:35:00

    According to Punch, UK authorities have extended visas for foreign prison staff—reported as majority Nigerians—to prevent a staffing shock that could deepen instability in the corrections system.

    The move is framed as a continuity measure linked to recruitment and retention gaps in the UK prison workforce and the operational risks of sudden personnel losses.

    For Nigerians working in UK corrections, extensions offer short-term certainty, but the underlying issue remains wages, conditions and how the UK plans to staff prisons sustainably.

    For Nigeria, the story reflects the diaspora reality: Nigerians are increasingly embedded in critical public services abroad, fueling remittances while raising brain-drain concerns at home.

    Sky News reported the same visa-extension context and warned of operational strain if workers were forced out abruptly, describing the impact on prisons as serious.

    The Independent also highlighted the staffing crisis and quoted concerns about a “devastating effect” on prisons if the visa cliff-edge was allowed to happen.

    Echotitbits take: Watch for broader migration-rule tweaks for frontline roles (health, care, corrections) and whether this becomes a template for other sectors. Nigeria can benefit if diaspora engagement is structured—skills partnerships, training pipelines and investment links back home.

    Source: Sky News — December 20, 2025 https://news.sky.com/story/hundreds-of-foreign-prison-staff-offered-emergency-extension-to-visa-to-stop-the-prison-system-collapsing-13485595