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Canada: Nigerian High Commission shuts operations to public indefinitely

Canada: Nigerian High Commission shuts operations to public indefinitely

The Nigerian High Commission in Ottawa, Canada, has shut down operations till further notice.

This was disclosed in a statement issued by the High Commission and published on its site.

The High Commission stated that the development followed the abuse of a system it put in place to attend to a limited number of persons due to COVID-19 protocols.

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It stated, “The High Commission of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in Canada wishes to inform Nigerian communities in Canada and the general public that the mission remains closed to the public.

“The special intervention arrangement whereby emergency cases were being handled on a discretionary basis is hereby suspended.”

According to the Commission, the system was set up to help Nigerians who had compelling passport renewal request and wanted to assist them.

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“Our citizens for some reason chose to abuse this system, they would show up at the chancery without an appointment and insist on being attended to even on days when we were not open to the public at all,” the commission, however, said.

What happened?

Its operations came to a halt on Friday, August, 14th when a group showed up at the High Commission and did not let the Embassy staff attend to those who had appointments.

“They went as far as holding a female staff member who went to address them, hostage, for over twenty minutes and subjected her to physical abuse.

“This kind of conduct is considered unnecessarily hostile and totally unacceptable and no embassy would tolerate conduct that puts the lives of its staff members at risk,” it added.

While acknowledging that the closure of the airspace is limiting its ability to “bring much-needed passport booklets into the country” and is an area it will work on, the Nigerian High Commission disclosed that it is “considering ways to make its premises more secure and less susceptible to unruly behaviour and violent mob action.

When it is likely to resume?

Nigerians whose work or study permits have expired since March 2020, and who do not have a valid passport, have a grace period that lasts until December 31st, according to the High Commission.

By this time, the commission is expected to have resolved some of the challenging issues that COVID-19 has created.

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