Archive | January, 2012

Reverend arraigned in UK for conducting fake marriages


Two Church of England vicars conducted “hundreds” of sham marriages to help illegal immigrants stay in Britain, a court heard on Wednesday.

The Reverend Elwon John, 44, and Reverend Brian Shipsides, 55, performed the sham wedding ceremonies at All Saints Church in Forest Gate, east London, jurors were told.

Once wed, there were a “strikingly high proportion” who then made applications to the Home Office for the right to remain in the country.

In some cases, EU nationals were even flown into Britain just so the marriages could take place before being flown straight out again, Inner London crown court heard.

According to the prosecution, 31-year-old “fixer” Amdudalat Ladipo – herself an illegal immigrant – arranged the weddings between mainly Nigerian and EU nationals.

It was not until officers from the Metropolitan Police and UK Border Agency caught wind of the scam that the trio were finally rumbled on July 31, 2010.

All three are now charged with conspiring to facilitate unlawful immigration. Shipsides has already pleaded guilty. Ladipo and John deny the charges.

David Walbank, prosecuting, said, “This case involves a massive and systematic immigration fraud.

“At the centre of this fraud is one particular parish church in the east of London, All Saints Church in Forest Gate.

“The Crown’s case is that there took place in that church over a two-and-a-half year period a very large number indeed of sham marriages entered in to for the purpose of immigration.

“Most of the so-called couples participated in these marriage ceremonies were not actually couples at all.

“They were married in that church not because they wished to spend their lives together and wanted the blessing of the church, most of the persons married there for a very different reason.

‘Their ultimate purpose was to obtain enhanced rights to enter and live in the United Kingdom.” Mr. Walbank told jurors the majority of the marriages which took place were between Nigerians and nationals from the European Economic Area, mainly from Portugal and the Netherlands.

He added, “The fraud, the Crown suggest, wasn’t confined to one or two, or even a couple of dozen of ceremonies. We are concerned in this case with hundreds of sham marriages.

“On some occasions, EEA nationals were flown into the UK specially for marriages to take place and then flown back out again.”

 

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Credit card fraud: Nigerian jailed for 17 years in US


A 40-year-old Nigerian, Adekunle Adetiloye, 40, has been sentenced to 17 years and 10 months imprisonment in North Dakota, United States for credit card fraud.

US Attorney Timothy Purdon said, “The sentence imposed on Tuesday should send a strong message to those who would seek to scam the citizens and businesses of North Dakota and the United States.

“We take the growing problem of foreign financial fraud seriously here and seeking justice for the victims of such crimes is a priority for our office.”

On February 16, 2011, Adetiloye pleaded guilty to participating in a scheme to defraud both financial institutions and individuals of money.

Adetiloye was living in Toronto, Canada before January 2005 until he was extradited to the US in May 2010. During that time, Adetiloye funded a lavish lifestyle by conducting, with others, a massive fraud scheme accomplished by executing tens of thousands of fraudulent acts against individuals, financial institutions, commercial data providers, merchants, commercial mailbox companies and state agencies.

Adetiloye’s scheme compromised the personal and private information of approximately 38,000 American citizens. The scheme involved tens of thousands of acts of illegal conduct throughout the US, as well as in Canada and England.

Adetiloye and his co-conspirators fraudulently obtained the personal identification information from commercial data providers, such as LexisNexis and ChoicePoint, and with that information assumed the identities of those unsuspecting people to open credit card and other bank accounts at US bank and 20 other banks across the US.

He used well over 100 different mail box addresses throughout the United States as well as approximately 100 different phone numbers with area codes representing all parts of the US.

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Foreign airlines charge premium passengers 23% more on Nigerian routes –Investigation


The preference for premium class seats by a lot of air travellers and the inability of the government to regulate the fares of foreign airlines means that passengers on Nigerian routes pay about 23 per cent more than travellers from other parts of the world, OYETUNJI ABIOYE writes.

Passengers on Nigerian routes pay about 23 per cent more on tickets for first class and business class seats than their counterparts in most parts of the world, investigation by our correspondent has revealed.

According to findings, there is a great disparity between the dollar per mile rate that foreign airlines charge premium passengers (first and business classes) on the Nigerian routes and most other international routes.

An analysis of some fares confirms that most of the airlines’ premium fares are about 23 per cent higher in Nigeria than most other global routes with similar flight time, mileage or distances.

A comparative analysis of some first and business class fares shows that Nigerians pay more on most routes.

For instance, a first class return ticket on the Lagos-Dubai route costs $4,695.5 on Emirates Airlines, while the Dubai-Johannesburg with almost the same mileage costs just $3,512. This shows that first class passengers on the Nigerian route pay about 33.5 per cent more.

According to data obtained from an airline global distribution company, the dollar per mile that the airline charges on the Lagos-Dubai route for first class passengers is $1.28, while it charges $0.89 on the Lagos-Johannesburg route.

Similarly, business class passengers pay 23.8 per cent more on the Lagos-Dubai route than their counterparts on the Dubai-Johannesburg route, according to the data.

Also, an average business class fare on the Lagos-Atlanta route, which costs $5,874 on Delta Airlines, is about 32.1 per cent higher than that of the Atlanta-Bombay route, which goes for $3,689.9 on the same carrier.

According to the GDS data, Delta charges its first class passengers $1.01 per mile on the Lagos-Atlanta route and $0.43 per mile on the Atlanta-Bombay route.

The data also shows that first class passengers are charged $1.41 per mile on the Lagos-Atlanta route, while their counterparts on the Atlanta-Bombay route pay $0.97.

The statistics also show that AirFrance charges its first class passengers on the Lagos-Paris route of 2919 miles about $8,984. Passengers pay $3.08 per mile.

However, first class passengers on the Paris-Bombay route with 4,349 miles pay $8,739, and are charged $2.0 per mile.

An aviation expert and airline economist, Mr. Gbenga Olowo, who confirmed this, linked the high fares on the Nigerian route to demand and psychological factors.

He said Nigerians’ penchant for travelling in first and business class cabins might have contributed significantly to the disparity in fares.

Olowo, who is also the President/Chief Executive Officer, Sabre Network, West Africa, a United States-based airline Global Distribution System, said “Empirical regular tariff data to different geographical zones show that demand and psychological factors do largely affect tariff fixing in different markets.

“In market economies, especially aviation, tariffs are not regulated as they are derived from so many factors: demand factors, psychological factors, mark up factors, antitrust competition rules, etc.

“Any profit-driven organisation, such as our foreign airlines, will attempt to maximise gains in any market for that matter. This is slightly evident in the dollar per mile figure for first and business classes en route Lagos and Europe, but not so in regular economy.

“However, the word, ‘discrimination,’ may not apply as airlines’ revenue and yield management technology have improved on passengers’ right to such extent that you can name your price but conditions do apply. Tariff without restrictions does attract higher fares.”

Olowo said the only way out was for Nigerian operators to compete effectively with the foreign carriers.

“If Nigeria seeks lower tariff than it is currently getting, then the indigenous operators must compete effectively. It is, however, unfortunate that Nigerian airlines are all individually very weak and highly indebted. Competition remains the key for improved services and economic tariffs,” he added.

The Coordinator, Akwaaba Travel Market, Mr. Ikechi Uko, said the airlines were only taking advantage of the large size of Nigeria’s market.

He advised government to carry out a comprehensive survey before giving any directive.

Enumerating the causes of the high fares, the Head, Research and Statistics, Zenith Travels, Mr. Olumide Ohunayo, said, “Nigerians are naturally ego-tripping and enjoy swimming in affluence, whether it is economical or not. Also, public travel expenditure is deregulated without ceiling; all what public officials pass to their audit departments is the ticket coupon or receipt.

“Moreover, lack of travel planning by most Nigerians and delayed approval and processing, which have become a norm, make those fares inevitably expensive. This, however, improves the yield and profitability of the foreign airlines.”

However, a prominent travel agency operator, who spoke under condition of anonymity, said the Nigerian government should be blamed for the exorbitant fare regime being implemented by the foreign airlines.

The operator, an executive member of the National Association of Nigerian Travel Agents, noted that even the economy fares are equally very expensive.

He said, “Our government should be blamed for this rip-off. Government is meant to regulate the foreign airlines’ fare regime, but they are not doing so. In other climes, the fares are regulated by the government. Our indigenous airlines too have joined them.

“One of the ways you can know is that, during the off-season when demand is low, you see some of these foreign airlines halving their fares in the name of promotional fares. Almost half of the seats in the planes are sold at this amount (a little less than 50 per cent of what is charged in normal seasons). Yet, they still make profit. The fact is that even if government, after a comprehensive investigation, decides to slash foreign fares by 25 per cent, the foreign airlines will still keep coming to Nigeria.”

A former spokesman of the liquidated national carrier, Nigeria Airways, Mr Chris Aligbe, said the government should take a cue from Ghana by engaging the foreign airlines in business discussions that would lead to reduction of fares.

Aligbe, who is the Managing Director, Belujane Konsult, an airline consultancy firm, said the majority of the foreign airlines operating in Ghana had low fare regime for their premium classes because the Ghanaian government engaged them in business discussions.

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Nigerians in U.S. to meet FG on fuel subsidy removal


 

Nigerians in the U.S. have scheduled a meeting with the Federal Government in Chicago on Jan. 14 to discuss the removal of fuel subsidy.

The meeting was organised by Nigerians in Diaspora Organisation in the Americas (NIDOA), in conjunction with the Nigerian Embassy in Washington.

NIDOA is the umbrella organisation of all Nigerians living in the Americas and the Caribbeans.

NAN also learnt that a high-powered Federal Government delegation would attend the meeting, which would also enable the government to make lucid clarifications on issues relating to the removal of fuel subsidy.

In an interview in New York on Sunday, Dr Ezekiel Macham, the President-General of the U.S. chapter of Zumunta Association, confirmed the proposed meeting.

He, however, stressed that the decision of the NLC and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) to embark on a nationwide strike on Monday, Jan. 9, would not help the situation.

Macham said that even though the removal of fuel subsidy could be beneficial in the long run, there was a need to initiate discussions on the policy before its implementation.

“They should have spent more time to prepare people for the removal of the fuel subsidy; it may be something good,’’ he said.

Besides Macham, a senior official of the Nigerian Embassy in Washington, who preferred anonymity, confirmed the proposed meeting. (NAN)

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Obtaining student visa with tears


In this report, SEGUN OLUGBILE who visited some foreign embassies in Abuja highlights the challenges being faced by young Nigerians in search of student visa to further their university education abroad

Frustration, anger and utmost apprehension were written boldly on the faces of youths, who gathered at the Ukrainian Embassy in Abuja on this hot Wednesday afternoon. Their mission was the same. They were there to obtain visa that would enable them to go and continue their studies in various universities in this eastern European nation.

Some of them from various states across the country had been there for as many as 20 times. The Nigerian security agents attached to the embassy had hectic time controlling the surging crowd of youths and some parents who accompanied their children. The embassy located on Parakou Crescent, off Aminu Kano Street, Abuja, did not provide shelter and seats for them. So they were left to the vagaries of the inclement weather that Abuja experienced in December.

Once in a while, an official of the embassy would come out to call out a number, the lucky applicant would rush in. And most of the few lucky ones that were given date for the oral interview, our correspondent gathered, had paid agents between N300,000 and N400,000. The same scenario played out at the Russian Embassy where frustrated prospective  students of universities in Russia were struggling to outdo one another to gain the attention of security operatives in the embassy.

One of the candidates, who simply identified herself as Oyin, said the embassies were capitalising on the increasing number of Nigerians seeking admission to universities in their countries to make more money from desperate Nigerians. This is true as findings revealed that each of the embassies had hiked the application form for visa from $45 in August to $90 in October.

Lucky applicants, it was gathered, paid between $1,000 and $1,200 after the application must have been granted. Due to the stringent conditions, most applicants were denied visa and subsequently lost their admission. Oyin, who had been admitted to the Lugansk State Medical University, Lugansk, Russia to pursue a degree in medicine, said she could not make the admission because she could not even secure a date for a meeting with the Russian Consul in Abuja let alone securing the visa.

“I had wanted to study medicine when I finished secondary school but I could not make the cut off point and therefore settled for a degree in Human Physiology. So, as soon as I completed my programme in 2010, I applied to Lugansk State Medical University in Russia. I was happy the day I got my letter of admission. I thereafter applied for visa and was asked to come and pick a date for the interview. The first day I came, what I met was an eyesore. Over 500 of us were there shoving and pushing ourselves, the security agents were not helping matters.’’

Though she got to the embassy around 6:30am, she left by 5:30pm after she succeeded in picking a number. That was on a Monday. The following Wednesday, she left her uncle’s place around 4am thinking she could get to the embassy early, do the interview early and left for home. But her assumption was wrong.

“When I got to the embassy around 4.45am, it was like a market. I was surprised to meet people there. It was as if people slept there. I waited till about 4.30pm when a Russian official just came and said they had  finished for the day. I was furious just like the other guys that I met there. That was how I have been visiting the embassy until one day in October, I did not get home until around midnight. This infuriated my parents and they stopped me from going there again. That was how I forfeited my admission.’’

Though she was expected to resume on November 15, her inability to get the visa had frustrated her ambition. When asked whether her university intervened on her behalf, she said yes. “The university wrote, I submitted all the necessary documents, I paid the visa application fee but unfortunately, I could not just get the visa,” she said.

Oyin had decided to go back home and participate in the mandatory national youth Service Corps scheme after which she might try to go to Canada for a degree in medicine.

At the Ukrainian embassy too, some young Nigerians narrated their travails to our correspondent. A graduate of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu State, Chima Ndukwe, said that though he had spent over  N250,000 on transport and hotel accommodation to and from Abuja from Lagos, he had not been able to secure a date for the interview.

He alleged that corruption and influence peddling by “some big men” and the lack of respect for Nigerians by the Ukranian Embassy officials were some of the factors frustrating  young Nigerians desiring foreign education.

“Nigerian government should do something about higher education in this country. These people treat us with disdain. When Nigerian university system was good, how many Nigerians  would go to Ukraine to go and study? Look, these people have no respect for us and unfortunately, our Nigerian brothers who are posted there as security agents are not helping matter. I’ve spent over N250,000 on transportation and accommodation from Lagos to Abuja.

“I’ve been coming since September and this is December and by rule I’m supposed to resume on November 15 although the university has said that I could come in January but with the way things are going, I don’t think that the visa application would be successful because as I’m talking to you now, what I have been able to do is just to get the number and as at now (3.43pm) only about three applicants had been called in. They would soon come out to tell us to go,” he said.

When our correspondent attempted to take a photograph of the crowd, one of the mobile policemen attached to the embassy prevented this, saying that  doing so was illegal. He threatened to give our correspondent the Boko Haram treatment if his order was disobeyed. The security man only directed our correspondent to the notice board placed at the fence of the embassy for information about the visa application process. “Mr. Journalist, you cannot enter the embassy and you must not take any photograph,  if you need any information go to that notice board,” he said.

On the noticeboard, the embassy just listed the procedure for student visa  and this include submission of letter of admission, letter of the sponsor and statement of account, identification letter as a Nigerian from the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the approval of education certificates presented by applicants by the Federal Ministry of Education.

However, it was alleged that sharp practices involving some top Nigerian officials in the Federal Ministry of Education and the finance ministry were some of the factors that enhanced the stringent conditions for the visa application.

One of the applicants, who pleaded not to be named for fear of possible persecution, said that top officials of the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs were colluding with some officials of these foreign embassies to compromise the process.

“I know people who bribed their way with about N250,000 to secure the visa after which they still have to pay the official visa fee,” he said.

But when our correspondent visited the ministry, officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, denied the allegation.

“We don’t issue visa, the only thing we do is to confirm the identity of applicants as Nigerians while the Federal Ministry of Education authenticates the certificates presented by applicants. On the issue of bribery, I cannot say anything about that,” the source said.

However, a parent, who simply identified herself as Mrs. Ogunnoiki, said though she did not give anybody bribe, it was not impossible that some highly placed Nigerians could be compromising the process.

“What I don’t like about the whole process is the way and manner these oyinbo people are treating Nigerians in Nigeria. They are using policemen and soldiers to harass us and our children, thereby subjecting us to psychological trauma. All through the period I went there, apart from the money we wasted, we were made to sit in the sun for hours all the time we were there.

Her daughter had secured admission to Crimea Medical University, Crimea in Ukraine to study medicine and since she got the admission letter, they had been shuttling between Port Harcourt where Ogunnoiki works as a lawyer and Abuja, where the Ukrainian embassy is located.

“Unfortunately, we couldn’t  secure the visa. We had to give up. We will try another university in another foreign nation in Europe in 2012,” she said.

Ogunnoiki, therefore, called on the Federal Government  to develop the nation’s universities. Our  lecturers are good but we lack equipment and teaching facilities. The Federal Government should provide them with tools to work with and motivate them with good welfare package, then all these foreign nations will stop treating us with disdain,” she said.

But why are Nigerians seeking foreign education? Some Nigerians, including the Executive Secretary, Association of African Universities, Prof. Olagbemiro Jegede; and the President, Nigerian Academy of Science, Prof. Oye Ibidapo- Obe, said that inadequate access, irregular academic calendar and preference for foreign certificates by employers of labour had combined to make foreign university education attractive to Nigerians.

Jegede, however, warned Nigerians seeking foreign university education to be wary of where they go to in search of such education. “We don’t cherish what we have but I will not blame people who go in search of foreign education, I will only warn that they should be careful in making their choices because not all foreign universities are good,” he said.

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Cashless Lagos takes off amid anxiety


Written by Odidison Omankhanlen

The much talked about cashless Lagos formally commenced on Sunday amid further clarifications from industry regulators and top state government officials.
The cashless policy, an initiative of the Bankers’ Committee, was introduced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), to drive development and modernisation of the nation’s payment system in line with the Vision 2020.
It is meant to gradually move the nation away from a cash-based economy to electronic payment system in line with what obtains in developed economies of the world.
Lagos State had been chosen as the pilot project before spreading to some key cities in the country by June this year.
Investigations by the reporter showed that though the policy took off during the public holiday when banks were not open for business, the CBN, banks and Lagos State government officials had spent the last few weeks enlightening members of the public on the desirability and modalities for effective implementation of the policy.
Only last week, the apex bank shifted the service charges/fees for those transacting cash above the stipulated amount in Lagos to March 30, 2012, stressing that it was in order to give people time to migrate to electronic channels and experience the infrastructure that had been put in place.
“Therefore, banks should continue to encourage their customers to migrate to available electronic channels, and where possible demonstrate the costs that will accrue to those that continue to transact high volumes of cash from March 30th, 2012 in Lagos State.”
CBN explained that the service charge for daily cumulative deposits above the limit into an account would be borne by the account holder, noting that during the pilot in Lagos, individuals paying money from Lagos, into an account outside Lagos, would bear the charges for any single transaction above the daily limit.
“Charges/fees shall apply for all transactions in Lagos, and on Lagos State based accounts. Transactions initiated out of Lagos State, and affecting a Lagos based account shall not attract charges/fees, and shall not be counted as part of the daily,” it stated.
The limits are cumulative daily limits each for withdrawal, and for deposits. For individuals, the daily free withdrawal limit is N150,000; while the daily free deposit limit is N150,000. The limits apply to the account so far as it involves cash, irrespective of channel for example over the counter, ATM, 3rd party cheques encashed over the counter, etc in which cash is withdrawn or deposited.
For instance, if an individual withdraws N50,000 over the counter, and N150,000 from the ATM on the same day, the total amount withdrawn by the customer is N200,000, and the service charge will apply on N50,000 – the amount above the daily free limit). The limit also applies to cash brought through CIT companies, as the CIT company only serves as a means of transportation.
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