The United States Consul-General,
Mr. Jeffery Hawkins, on Thursday September 19 2013, gave reasons why Nigeria
was excluded from the 2015 Diversity-Visa-Programme registration.
Hawkins
told journalists at the U.S. Consulate General in Lagos, that Nigeria was among
other countries that had in the last five years, sent more than 50,000
immigrants to the country through the programme.
"As at today, Nigerians have
graduated from being under-represented to being a fully well represented group
in the U.S.
"There is therefore no longer
any need to encourage Nigerians to apply to travel to the U.S. through the
Diversity-Visa-Programme. "Already there are too many Nigerians in the
U.S. that have benefited from this programme,'' he said.
The envoy explained that the
diversity visa was created to promote countries with low rates of immigration
to the U.S. Hawkins said that Nigeria and other affected countries had already
exceeded their quota in the last five years.
He, however, stressed that the U.S.
authorities would continue to give preference to Nigerians travelling to U.S
for visits, business transactions, studies and professional engagements.
"All other types of immigration from Nigeria to the U.S, apart from the
diversity visa, would continue unabated.
"Also, let me say that the ban
has nothing to do with our relations with Nigeria now, and in the years
ahead,'' the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the envoy as saying to journalists.
He also dismissed insinuations making the rounds that the move was to reduce the
number of Nigerians travelling to the U.S.
The U.S official also said that the
development had "nothing to do with insecurity, activities of Boko Haram
and other forms of upheaval in Nigeria." It would be recalled that the
U.S. Department of State, banned Nigeria, Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, China,
Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador and Haiti from participating
in the 2015 Diversity-Visa-Programme.
Other affected countries are: India,
Jamaica, Mexico, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, South Korea, United Kingdom and
Vietnam.
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