Nigerians
travelling to the United Kingdom will require pre-entry tuberculosis
screening with effect from 2013, the spokesman of the British High
Commission, Mr. Hooman Nouruzi, has said.
Nouruzi
told the News Agency of Nigeria on Wednesday in Abuja that the policy
affected 67 countries listed as `tuberculosis endemic’ by the World
Health Organisation.
He said that under the new scheme, travellers to the UK would be tested for tuberculosis as part of the visa procedure.
``The
UK Border Agency carries out pre-entry screening for TB for non-EEA
migrants who are resident in 15 countries entering the UK for six months
or more.
``We
are proposing to extend pre-entry screening of applicants to an
additional 67 countries, which have been identified using WHO data, as
having a high incidence of TB,’’ Nouruzi said.
NAN
reports that the 15 nations currently being screened for TB include
Bangladesh, Cambodia, Ghana, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Togo, Niger,
Kenya, Eritrea, Somalia, Pakistan, Sudan, Tanzania, Thailand and Laos.
Although
Nouruzi was not definite on when in 2013 they will start screening
Nigerians travelling to the UK, he said some hospitals would be
designated for the exercise.
``We
will implement the changes in phases and complete the roll out to all
on the WHO high incidence list by the end of 2013,’’ he said.
NAN
reports that no fewer than 10,000 UK visas are issued monthly in
Nigeria, a figure which rises during the summer months of June, July and
August.
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