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Lawyer Faults International Passport Fee Hike, Urges National Assembly Intervention

Public issues analyst Justice Osai Ahiakwo has criticized the recent increase in the cost of obtaining Nigerian international passports.

He described it as an “economic summersault” that undermines the Federal Government’s promises to ease the suffering of citizens.

Speaking exclusively to Daily Post in Calabar, Ahiakwo said the increase, which now pegs a 32-page passport at N100,000 and a 64-page booklet at N200,000, amounts to “a reintroduction of taxes at the detriment of the people.”

He recalled that under President Tinubu’s administration, passport fees had already risen within a year, moving from N35,000 to N50,000 for the 32-page passport and from N70,000 to N100,000 for the 64-page option.

The latest increase by NIS sparked outrage among Nigerians, with many lamenting that it further shuts the door on ordinary citizens who struggle to afford international travel documents for education, business, or medical reasons.

Critics further say that the increase widens inequality and the gap between the privileged few and the masses.

Ahiakwo argued that “It is disheartening that such increases are being implemented without statutory backing,”

The lawyer insisted that the Immigration Act does not empower the Nigeria Immigration Service or the Minister of Interior to unilaterally raise fees.

According to him, the decision to alter passport charges should be a matter for the National Assembly, just as happens in other democracies like the United Kingdom, where parliament approved the latest passport fee hike, and the United States, where Congress oversees the Department of State’s pricing decisions.

“The Immigration Service, as an agent of the executive, cannot on its own determine what Nigerians should pay for passports. The legislature must rise to the occasion and call them to order,”
Ahiakwo said.

He urged lawmakers to summon the Minister of Interior or the Comptroller-General of Immigration to explain the basis for the hike, warning that unless checked, such “arbitrariness” would continue to impose untold hardship on Nigerians.

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FG Defends Passport Price Hike To N100,000, N200,000

The Federal Government on Thursday justified the recent increase in Nigerian passport fees to ₦100,000 and ₦200,000, stating that the adjustment is aimed at sustaining service quality, curbing corruption, and ensuring timely issuance of travel documents.

The Nigeria Immigration Service, in a statement signed by its Public Relations Officer, ACI AS Akinlabi, on Thursday, announced that from September 1, 2025, applications made within Nigeria will attract new fees of N100,000 for the 32-page, five-year validity passport and N200,000 for the 64-page, 10-year validity passport.

“The review which only affect Passport Application fees made in Nigeria, now set a new fee thresholds for 32-page with five-year validity at N100,000 and 64-page with 10-year validity at N200,000,”
the statement read.

The NIS, however, said Nigerians in the diaspora will continue to pay $150 for the 32-page, five-year passport and $230 for the 64-page, 10-year passport.

It explained that the adjustment was aimed at maintaining the integrity of the document while making issuance processes more efficient.

The increase comes barely a year after the Federal Government approved an earlier adjustment in August 2024, which raised the 32-page, five-year booklet from N35,000 to N50,000, and the 64-page, 10-year booklet from N70,000 to N100,000.

At the time, the NIS said the hike was necessary to sustain the quality of the passport and improve service delivery.

On Thursday, the Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, defended the new hike.

Speaking in Abuja during the ministry’s mid-tenure performance retreat, Tunji-Ojo said the hike would ensure timely delivery of passport and eliminate corruption,

He said, “Our target is very clear: within one week of enrolment, every Nigerian should have their passport in hand. Not just delivering quickly, but delivering quality passports that reflect our integrity as a nation,” he said.

He noted that the new system was designed to eliminate long delays and extortion that once forced citizens to wait up to seven months or pay as much as N200,000 to fast-track processing.

“The system that we inherited that had six months backlog which we were able to clear in two and a half weeks. Nigerians will apply for passports and wait endlessly, or be asked to pay hundreds of thousands of naira.

“My own daughter had that bad experience. Even when I was chairman of the House Committee on NDDC, my daughter wanted passport, it was a problem. I had to pay hundreds of thousands to be able to get a passport for my daughter, a 12-year-old girl. That era is over,” Tunji-Ojo said.

The minister disclosed that the centralised personalisation centre, the largest in Africa, would ensure faster processing and tighter security.

“With this facility, we can print five times more passports than we currently need. Once you enrol, it doesn’t take us more than 24 hours to vet. Printing capacity is no longer our problem,”
he explained.

As part of the reforms, Tunji-Ojo announced that Passport Control Officers will no longer have the power to approve or delay applications.

“Some PCOs had so much power that they could decide not to approve or not to print a passport until they were settled. That abuse of power ends now,”
he declared.

According to him, centralising the approval process would curb corruption and restore credibility to Nigeria’s travel documents.

“We realised that the best way to cut corruption is to remove human contact to the barest minimum. Passport approval will no longer rest with PCOs. My responsibility is not for them to like me — it is to deliver efficiency. Let Nigerians be happy,”
he said.

He added that the reforms will also protect the integrity of Nigeria’s passport.

“My responsibility is not just to make passports available, but to ensure that anybody carrying it is a Nigerian. If you are not a Nigerian, you cannot carry it. It’s about our national integrity.”

Citing past abuses, he recalled how foreigners once procured Nigerian passports illegally.

“In one incident, a Ugandan woman carrying a Nigerian passport was arrested at Lagos Airport after paying $1,000 to procure it. That cannot continue. Our passport must remain a true symbol of Nigerian identity,”
the minister stressed.

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Nigeria Immigration Service Increases International Passport Fee to N100,000

Nigeria Immigration Service has announced an upward review of the fee for international passport.
Starting September 1, the international passport fee will be increased from N50,000 to N100,000.
According to the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) this will be applicable to a 32-page passport with 5-year validity.
However, a 64-page passport with 10-year validity, which goes for N100,000, will now cost N200,000.
The increment takes effect from September 1, 2025.
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Entertainment News

Ayra Starr cried as she recounts her ordeal at the passport office.

Oyinkansola Sarah Aderibigbe, better known as Ayra Starr, a Nigerian vocalist, narrates her experience at the passport office.

Ayra starr
Ayra starr

Ayra Starr, who is the current star girl of Mavin records takes to Twitter to narrate her ordeal at the passport office.

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Ayra had gone to the Nigerian Immigration Service to obtain her passport, but she had no idea what was coming.

To her shock, she was asked to take her lashes off. She adds that she would never forgive the passport officials for what they had done to her.

“This passport office people really made me just remove my lashes. I’ll never forgive y’all”, Ayra cries out on Twitter.

See post below;