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Bahamas Targets Visa Overstays and Immigration Fraud in New Reform Agenda

Bahamas Targets Visa Overstays and Immigration Fraud in New Reform Agenda

The Bahamas government is moving to harden immigration enforcement, setting out plans for daily penalties on visa overstayers, heavier punishment for immigration fraud, and a biometric system to strengthen border control in its new parliamentary agenda.

The measures were presented Wednesday in the Speech from the Throne at the State Opening of Parliament, after Prime Minister Philip Davis’ administration was returned to office. In the address, the government said “strong borders and lawful immigration systems are essential to national stability and sovereignty,” while signalling a wide package of changes to improve oversight and enforcement.

One proposal, the Employer Immigration Compliance Act, would bring stiffer consequences for businesses accused of misusing the work permit process or unlawfully hiring non-nationals. The administration also intends to create a Bahamian E-Verify Portal, giving employers a way to check whether a person is legally allowed to work before making a hire.

Officials said people who remain in The Bahamas beyond their authorised stay would face daily fines, while bans on returning to the country would be enforced more firmly. Another central plank is a National Biometric Immigration System, expected to feature biometric e-gates, alerts for overstays, and stronger tools to detect fraud at the border.

The Davis administration also plans to set up an Immigration Fraud Intelligence Unit focused on investigating and prosecuting immigration-related fraud. Public officers who help facilitate immigration or passport fraud would face mandatory sentencing provisions under the proposed reforms.

The planned changes come as governments across the Caribbean deal with irregular migration, border security worries, and pressure to update immigration systems. During the address, The Bahamas government said the country is facing “pressures from irregular migration,” as well as wider economic and geopolitical challenges affecting small island states.

The immigration package sits within a broader legislative programme that also covers cybersecurity, labour reform, healthcare, housing, energy, and economic development.

Syndicated from Cnweekly · originally published .

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