By Uche Onyeali
Minister of Interior, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo has expressed shock over the alleged shooting of an officer of the Nigeria Immigration Service, NIS, on the orders of a Chinese company.
The minister, who spoke at a stakeholders sensitisation workshop on implementing the Nigeria visa policy 2025 in Abuja yesterday, condemned the incident which happened in Niger State, describing it as an attack on Nigeria.
“I will not go to any country, open a company and say the immigration service cannot come out. I will not do that.
“I don’t want to mention the company here, but they shot one of our immigration officers. They told their security attaché to shoot our officer and he did— a foreign company?
“That happened a couple of weeks ago in Niger State and we are going to take it up with the Chinese embassy because it is a Chinese company.
“I won’t go to China as a Nigerian, enter a company and tell my security side to shoot a government official in uniform. It is never done anywhere in the world. That alone is an attack on Nigeria,” the minister said
Narrating the incident, Tunji-Ojo said the officer was carrying out his lawful duties before the firm acted difficult.
“For a father to leave his children to fulfil his legitimate responsibility, go to a company and say, ‘I need to see your expatriates, let us see your list’, just to ask questions — and the next thing, you lock the gate and shoot him?
“That is a diplomatic issue and we will handle it. It will not happen again. So we are going to be very firm. We will not disturb your business or overburden your operations.
“But don’t make us inferior in our land. We are going to be very tough on this. I am not just speaking with passion; I am speaking with anger,” the minister raged.
He reminded foreign firms that government has the authority to revoke business licenses and declare companies operating with impunity, illegal.
“No company is above the law. We will not tolerate it. No agent, no company is above the law.
“We are doing our best to make things easier and to collaborate with businesses. But please, we beg you, do not insult us. We will not disrespect you.
“As long as the president remains in office, nobody will disrespect you in Nigeria. All we ask for is mutual respect,” he added.
AljazirahNigeria recalls that Tunji-Ojo had on Tuesday announced the introduction of an expatriate administration system from May 1 to monitor foreign workers in the country.
The announcement came as the minister said Nigeria would begin to clamp down on irregular migrants.