KENYA IMMIGRATION: PASSES, PERMITS, PR, CITIZENSHIP NOW GOES ONLINE!

According to a notice on the Kenya Immigration Website https://fns.immigration.go.ke/ all foreign nationals services will be applied for online starting March 1st 2016

This should be a great thing and we hope that as we get used to the system, a few teething problems will be addressed. One of the immediate challenge that may arise is the inability of companies to apply for say permits or passes for their employees on a corporate account. I would Imagine that the system should eventually be able to accommodate corporate account where company XYZ for instance is able to make applications on their account  for all their employees using a designated person’s account an email which may be the same for say 10 applications made by the same company.

I must say it is still too early to appraise the system objectively but as we go along, we should be able to help in analysing it and giving areas where this system needs improvement. I am excited and happy that the Department of Immigration is making these good steps towards the automation of services and wish them the very best.

IMMMIGRATIONKENYANEWS IS NOW UNDER WWW.GEORGEMMUCEE.COM

In view of the enormous support and patronage we have received from you in the last one year we have been around, your unique, one of its kind in Africa blog http://www.immigrationkenyanews.com is now a segment under my brand new professional website www.georgemmucee.com

This was informed by the support we have received over the last one year where we had over 15,000 views! Under the website we will be able to offer you much more. I will highlight a few things we will be able to do:

  1. You will get your usual updates on trends and happenings on Kenya Immigration practice.
  2. You will get publications on a wide range of other issues…in fact you have a chance of requesting information on any area of your interest and we will get professionals to help out.
  3. If you believe you can generate content in an area you are an expert in and want a platform to share with the world, I am glad to host that in my website for free.
  4. Subscription: if you love our forum and would like to subscribe as a show of support we have a segment for that as well and it is free of charge.
  5. Inquiry: We are availing an opportunity for you to make an inquiry through our ask George and I will be able to give you some thoughts at no cost to guide you on the issues you believe I can help.
  6. Resources: we will try as much a possible to avail some commonly needed links and forms to you at no cost.
  7. Pictorials: you will be able to see a few selected pictures of anything we find interesting for our patrons…not those commonly circulated selfies but well thought our themed pictures.
  8. Events: from time to time, we will scan the net and post events we think you will be interested in.
  9. Social media presence: we will avail our presence to you through the various social media forums to make it possible to reach us in a way you feel comfortable.
  10. Giving back: we are not doing this so that you can pay us…this is our way of giving back to the world. If you feel indebted to us in any way for the information we provide here…please be free from it but should you feel that you would like to support the site in one way or another and are passionate about it, we could discuss and see how that can be allowed.
  11. Email@georgemmucee.com: if you would like us to give you an email @georgemmucee.com we are happy to do that as well.

I am looking forward to a very exciting year 2016 and to what we will offer you under www.georgemmucee.com.

I also wish to appreciate the creative designer behind this site, Javis Kinanja ( www.qliwi.com) an amazing gentle man and a professional. If you need him to design your site, please check his site and write to him… I would recommend him to you any time.

Addis Ababa:Ethiopia – Epitome of Development and Beauty

Beautiful story from Ethiopia.

ckahuthu's avatarCarolyne's World

“Carolyne,you are going to Addis next week” Came the news on one Monday morning.What a way to start the week!Excitement and anxiety build up and I immediately start visualizing the trip. Do I need a visa? Is it referred or obtained on arrival?Are the people friendly?Are they as beautiful as hyped?Is the traffic terrible?The questions are endless. I have been to other East African countries but there is definitely something unique about this visit and my instincts confirm this.
The day finally dawns, I obtain
all the necessary itineraries including yellow fever and am set to go. All the processes at JKIA are swiftly completed and at exactly 5:30 pm,the flight takes off. It is a smooth journey at an altitude of approximately 40,000 ft and within 2 hours,we arrive to Bole airport. I head to the Immigration section and a dazzling smile from an Immigration officer assures me am…

View original post 270 more words

Make Him Smile This Valentine’s Day

Valentine things

Judith Kemunto's avatarMiss JKemunto's Blog

Happy-Valentines-Day-pink-heart-with-sparkles

Valentine’s Day is here with us again. I love Valentine’s Day.

  1. Because I get to eat chocolate and black forest cake.
  2.  Because I am a hopeless romantic and I believe that there’s nothing on this earth as powerful and as beautiful as love. Everything beautiful should be celebrated.

What comes to your mind when you think of Valentine’s Day? Let’s face it; we girls love to be gifted. When we think of this day, we already know what we want. We have a long list of things he should definitely buy. Chocolates, a certain type of wine, shoes we spotted at a store but cannot afford, a day at the salon, dinner at a certain restaurant etc, We start giving hints the moment January is over and pretend like we don’t even know when valentine’s day is but are counting minutes till the day gets here. 99% the time, we…

View original post 695 more words

Nairobi National Park Disappointments

Nice piece here

ckahuthu's avatarCarolyne's World

It is a bright Sunday and a friend who is visiting from Ivory Coast requests for a tour of our Nairobi National Park.A short drive from the Central Business District and there we are with much excitement and pride of showing off our spectacular rich heritage.We get to the entrance where we are to make the payments and our first drawback is when our friend is told to pay 50 dollars despite being on a student pass.The four of us pay a residential rate of Ksh 500 each and 350 for our car:In total_Ksh 7600.
Our encouragement right now is the money shall be compensated by having a great view of all the animals especially a lion. Luckily, we are dazed at the entrance by monkeys that are basking and a lazing warthog but after 2 hours of driving right and left in the park,there are no animals in view.In…

View original post 94 more words

CORRUPTION IN KENYA DEFIES ANY LOGIC UNDER THE SUN!

In last many months of last year and the better part of this year so far, all media in Kenya has been awash with screaming headlines about corruption. Right from the National Youth service saga, Eurobond money, police vetting and the now trending Supreme Court judge. In fact, there was one that almost got missed: that Kenya has for the record time remained in the list of one of the most corrupt countries in the world at position 139 out of 168 countries featured in the Transparency International (TI) report 2015.
I have always wondered, if indeed as a country, we are as corrupt as always spoken about and always prayed it is not true. However, all fundamentals show that indeed we are corrupt…in fact very corrupt! The TI report is indeed damning not only for Kenya but many others. According to this report…Sixty-eight per cent of countries worldwide have a serious corruption problem. Half of the G20 are among them. Not one single country, anywhere in the world, is corruption-free… the report further says that poor countries like Kenya and a couple others lose USD 1 Trillion every year to corruption!
The allegations of corruption and bribery against the Supreme Court judge, the Hon. Justice Tonui, now being labeled the supreme corruption by some sections of the press, is mind boggling. I must say from the onset that this is a matter under investigation and we are yet to ascertain the truth about this entire saga. The figures being mentioned, 2 Million USD or about Kshs. 200 Million makes one shake his head in disbelief. Arguing from a hypothetical position…if indeed such money was given to the judge by the said governor then this defies logic and basic tenets of sound financial management. A governor in Kenya earns between 1 Million to 2 million at most (in fact it is much less). It would therefore not make any sense that one can invest Kshs. 200 Million to earn at most Kshs. 120! That in business is a total loss….well, you may say it is not about the money but then you will have to tell me it is about what?
In fact my argument is this is about money and more money….corruption as its core. The truth is, most of those in authority, especially those in county governorship, are on a looting spree. If one can pay a bribe of such magnitude, then is obvious that they will make much more thorough their ‘investment’. We have seen characters that were nondescripts before being elected into offices now living like real new rich…of course all this is abetted, encouraged and even celebrated by the citizens who are actually the victims. As long as the thief shares some crumbs with them…then that is ‘our man….our thief indeed’
I can’t fathom how such state of affairs continues unabated. In this country, citizens suffering from cancer are dying slowly, surely and painfully because the radiology machines at the Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) are either too few, broken down or non-existent. People are on the waiting for almost 0ne year to get chemotherapy! Surely that is hell on earth….and that is while the elite take pricey nyama choma in high end places and washing it away with the most expensive wine and champagne! This cannot be normal…something is terribly amiss because we all seem to have accepted the system and just trying to find a place to fit to have our bite at the cherry if we are lucky.
I think the day we get angry enough about this corruption is the day we will liberate ourselves. 2015 may have signaled something to that end is what the chair of Transparency international, Jose Ugaz said is true…. “The 2015 Corruption Perceptions Index clearly shows that corruption remains a blight around the world. But 2015 was also a year when people again took to the streets to protest corruption. People across the globe sent a strong signal to those in power: it is time to tackle grand corruption”

TECHNICAL HITCH WITH KENYA EVISA PORTAL

I Have received several complains about people’s application showing expired after they have completed the process and even paid. I Have spoken to the folks at Visa Section, Immigration Headquarters and they have confirmed it’s a TECHNICAL HITCH. If you face that problem please call the number on the website and ask for the visa section and you provide your reference number upon which they will reverse the application to either in progress or approved or rejected as the case may be.

All the best guys and sorry for the problem.

George

State Of Corruption in Kenya: Senior Counsel Ahmednassir Abdullahi’s thoughts


We have been treated to series of scandals upon scandals on corruption.  It really shocks me that this is happening. I was drafting my thoughts on the state of affairs but came accross a nicely done article on the same by Senior Counsel Ahmednassir Abdullahi which I am happy to share below. I agree almost 90% with his thoughts if not more.

Please check the article from the link below:

http://mobile.nation.co.ke/blogs/Why-efforts-to-clean-up-the-Judiciary-are-always-going-to-fail/-/1949942/3059794/-/format/xhtml/-/13i1v37z/-/index.html

Enjoy


 

 

GLOBAL MOBILITY: DEPLOYING EXPATRIATES INTO AFRICA? EAST OR WEST AFRICA: WHICH IS WHICH?

I have been privileged to address a few forums on mobility into Africa well attended by Human Resource professionals and global mobility support teams. The question of how easy or difficult it is to deploy resources into Africa has always featured and I must say there is no instant coffee answer to that. In my most recent such forum in Edinburg Scotland in November last year, I learnt a lot from my colleagues overseeing South and West Africa Immigration practices.
Although there are a lot of similarities across Africa on how immigration is practiced, there are a few distinct areas worth mentioning. If for instance you are looking at deploying a resource in Africa quickly and you have a choice of say Kenya and Nigeria or Ghana then from what I learnt in that conference, Kenya would be the country to consider because you can easily get a short-term work authorization for up to six months as you decide on what to do next…. Should you decide to settle such expat in Kenya long term, you can also change his status to long term while still in country. This is not the status in either Ghana or Nigeria. If on the other hand, you are looking for certainty in terms of acquiring the immigration status for such a resource, then Ghana and Nigeria are the places to consider because in both countries, there is certainty on timelines once you apply. The Kenyan system, although the service charter for Kenya Immigration sets such timelines, in practice there is no certainty partly due to factors beyond the department of Immigration.
On the issue of the percentage of the number of expatriates a company can hire, again there is a difference in how Kenya, Ghana and Nigeria would do it. The Kenya Immigration laws and policies do not set a quota system for any industry. The Kenyanization policy only says that it is the position of the Kenyan government that the economy should be run by locals and that every application for a work permit must be justified on individual case. This is both good and bad. Good in the sense that as long as you can justify with requisite documentations then you will get a work permit for your expatriates. It is bad in the sense that even in cases where it is very obvious that an expatriate is required, you still have to justify. On the other hand both Nigeria and Ghana have quotas for some sectors of the economy especially Oil and Gas. This is also good and bad. Good to the extent that once you have your quota allocated then it is almost certain that you will get the desired work permits within your quota. Conversely, should you need more expats than your quota, you will have to hold your horses until such a time that you have to renegotiate your quota and convince the authorities on the same.
There are many such areas where immigration practice in East Africa differs with Immigration practice in West Africa but on the overall there are a lot of commonalities in both cases. For instance same-sex partners are not recognized as so in either jurisdiction. Gay couples whether in Kenya, Nigeria or Ghana cannot apply for say dependent pass. So if you are deploying expats, you may want to look into that. One last thing I also learnt is that it is not clear how to treat polygamous deploying into these jurisdictions. As you would know, most African cultures and Islam as a religion allows for polygamous marriage…Immigration laws though do not seem to anticipate that a polygamous man being deployed as an expatriate may travel with his three or four wives! I have asked my folks at Kenya Immigration what would happen if such a man applies for dependent passes for his three wives! They all looked at me with amazement and obviously with no clear position in law…this is similar to Nigeria and Ghana and many other jurisdictions as well….anyway, now you have some basic insights into some differences and similarities in Immigration practice in West and East Africa. Watch out for more soon….bye