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FSW 2014 applicants from Nigeria - Let's network

bolaopemire

Hero Member
Aug 27, 2015
302
3
Category........
Visa Office......
accra
NOC Code......
1212
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
27-10-2014
AOR Received.
02-02-2015
Med's Request
21-07-2015
Med's Done....
13-08-2015
Passport Req..
10-03-2016
VISA ISSUED...
23-03-2016
LANDED..........
08-06-2016
iamdoingthings said:
The good lord has done it again. MR for me and my family dropped between 12:27 PM & 12:57 PM. I was actually surprised when I saw four emails. I had thought it would be just one email.

App Received: 3rd Dec 2014
PER: 20th Feb 2015
MR: 15th Sept. 2015

All those still expecting any form of update will receive theirs before the end of the week IJN.....Amen.

PS: Is Abuja Clinics "eMedical enabled"?
Congratulations and AMEN to your prayers
 

soundcode

Star Member
Dec 18, 2014
81
0
Category........
Visa Office......
ACCRA GHANA
NOC Code......
2263
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
22 DECEMBER 2014
IELTS Request
SENT WITH APPLICATION
File Transfer...
9-MARCH-2015
Med's Request
X-JUNE-2016
Med's Done....
X-JUNE-2016
Interview........
WAIVED BY GOD'S GRACE
Passport Req..
X-JUNE-2016 BY GOD'S GRACE
VISA ISSUED...
SOONEST
LANDED..........
SOONEST
henstboy said:
Congrats to all that received their MRs, getting ready to be part of the MR positive response ooo, the waiting i believe is almost over, all December Applicants in the house can we all shout MR come our way now IJN.
it shall end in praise for us ALL.
MR, come our way now IJN, Amen ooo
 

Bbmj

Star Member
Apr 17, 2015
87
0
Category........
Visa Office......
Accra
NOC Code......
0112
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
11-08-2014
Nomination.....
02-12-2014
Med's Request
16-06-2015
Med's Done....
18-06-2015
Passport Req..
27-08-2015
VISA ISSUED...
14-09-2015
LANDED..........
29-09-2015
iamdoingthings said:
The good lord has done it again. MR for me and my family dropped between 12:27 PM & 12:57 PM. I was actually surprised when I saw four emails. I had thought it would be just one email.

App Received: 3rd Dec 2014
PER: 20th Feb 2015
MR: 15th Sept. 2015

All those still expecting any form of update will receive theirs before the end of the week IJN.....Amen.

PS: Is Abuja Clinics "eMedical enabled"?
Congratulations to you ;D
 

blacky

Hero Member
Nov 14, 2014
652
26
Category........
FSW
Visa Office......
Accra
NOC Code......
0712
Pre-Assessed..
Yes
App. Filed.......
12-11-2014
Doc's Request.
03-08-15 comp.reg. docs & salary acc stmt
Nomination.....
03-02-15
AOR Received.
03-03-15
IELTS Request
sent with Apps
File Transfer...
16-7-16 bank statement verification
Med's Request
23-02-17
Med's Done....
06-03-17
Interview........
2-5-17 RPRF+Pcc+pof+updated forms
Passport Req..
7-08-17
VISA ISSUED...
21-8-17
LANDED..........
october 2017
MR is bringing out all d abuja people(i initially tot it was just landed Zoze,me,lolesky,mabertia and few others)
CONGRATULATIONS iamdoingthings and may u continue to do things.
 

Silverblade

Hero Member
Nov 26, 2014
427
7
Calgary, Nigeria
Visa Office......
[color=purple][b]Accra[/b][/color]
NOC Code......
[color=purple][b]1224[/b][/color]
App. Filed.......
[color=purple][b]25:11:2014[/b][/color]
Nomination.....
[color=purple][b]CC: 20:01:2015[/b][/color]
AOR Received.
[color=purple][b]PER: 12:02:2015[/b][/color]
IELTS Request
[color=purple][b]Submitted[/b][/color]
Med's Request
[color=purple][b]08:09:2015[/b][/color]
Med's Done....
[color=purple][b]14:09:2015[/b][/color]
Interview........
[color=purple][b]NA[/b][/color]
Passport Req..
[color=purple][b]24:03:2016[/b][/color]
VISA ISSUED...
[color=purple][b]07:04:2016[/b][/color]
LANDED..........
[color=purple][b]03:09:2016[/b][/color]
Abuja peepz heard you guys had a COA session today, how did it go?

blacky said:
MR is bringing out all d abuja people(i initially tot it was just landed Zoze,me,lolesky,mabertia and few others)
CONGRATULATIONS iamdoingthings and may u continue to do things.
 

CalgaryChic

Hero Member
Aug 27, 2014
704
14
Category........
Visa Office......
AVO
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
IELTS Request
Sent with App
Med's Done....
30/07/2015
I read this today and it ministered to me..........it take style long shay...... :D

When they got into the boat, the wind ceased. — Matthew 14:32

Waiting is the hardest work of hope. ~ Lewis Smedes

Waiting patiently is not a strong suit in American society.

A woman’s car stalls in traffic. She looks in vain under the hood to identify the cause, while the driver behind her leans relentlessly on his horn. Finally she has had enough. She walks back to his car and offers sweetly, “I don’t know what the matter is with my car. But if you want to go look under the hood, I’ll be glad to stay here and honk for you.”

We are not a patient people. We tend to be in a horn-honking, microwaving, Fed-Ex mailing, fast-food eating, express-lane shopping hurry. People don’t like to wait in traffic, on the phone, in the store, or at the post office.

Robert Levine, in a wonderful book called A Geography of Time, suggests the creation of a new unit of time called the honko-second — “the time between when the light changes and the person behind you honks his horn.” He claims it is the smallest measure of time known to science.

Most of us do not like waiting very much, so we like the fact that Matthew shows Jesus to be the Lord of urgent action. Three times in just a few sentences Matthew uses the word immediately — always of Jesus: Jesus made the disciples get into a boat and go on ahead of Him “immediately.” When the disciples thought they were seeing a ghost and cried out in fear, Jesus answered them “immediately.” When Peter began to sink and cried out for help, Jesus “immediately” reached out his hand and caught him.

Jesus’ actions are swift, discerning, and decisive. He doesn’t waste a honko-second. And yet, this is also a story about waiting. Matthew tells us that Jesus comes to the disciples “during the fourth watch of the night.”

The Romans divided the night into four shifts: 6:00–9:00; 9:00-midnight; midnight–3:00; and 3:00–6:00. So Jesus came to the disciples sometime after 3 o’clock. But they had been in the boat since before sundown the previous day. Why the long delay? If I were one of the disciples, I think I would prefer Jesus to show up at the same time or even slightly ahead of the storm. I’d like Him there in a honko-second.

But Matthew has good reasons for noting the time. A. E. J. Rawlinson notes that early Christians suffering their own storm of persecution may have taken great comfort in this delay:

Faint hearts may even have begun to wonder whether the Lord Himself had not abandoned them to their fate, or to doubt the reality of Christ. They are to learn from this story that they are not forsaken, that the Lord watches over them unseen… [that] the Living One, Master of wind and waves, will surely come quickly for their salvation, even though it be in the “fourth watch of the night.”

Matthew wanted his readers to learn to wait.

Another moment of waiting involves Peter’s decision to leave the boat. He cannot do this on the strength of his own impulse; he must ask Jesus’ permission first, then wait for an answer — for the light to turn green. I wonder if another type of waiting was involved for Peter. What do you suppose his very first steps on the water looked like? I expect that Jesus was an accomplished water-walker. But for Peter, I wonder if there wasn’t a learning curve involved. Maybe, like the Bill Murray character in the movie What About Bob?, he had to start with baby steps.

Learning to walk always requires patience.

It was not until the whole episode was over that the disciples got what they wanted — “the wind died down.” Why couldn’t Jesus have made the wind die down “immediately” — as soon as He saw the disciples’ fear? It would have made Peter’s walk easier. But apparently Jesus felt they would gain something by waiting.

Consider the activity that Peter and the other disciples had to engage in right up to the very end: waiting.

Let’s say you decide to get out of the boat. You trust God. You take a step of faith — you courageously choose to leave a comfortable job to devote yourself to God’s calling; you will use a gift you believe God has given you even though you are scared to death; you will take relational risks even though you hate rejection; you will go back to school even though people tell you it makes no sense financially; you decide to trust God and get out of the boat. What happens next?

Well, maybe you will experience a tremendous, nonstop rush of excitement. Maybe there will be an immediate confirmation of your decision — circumstances will click, every risk will pay off, your efforts will be crowned with success, your spiritual life will thrive, your faith will double, and your friends will marvel, all in the space of a honko-second. Maybe. But not always. For good reasons, God does not always move at our frantic pace. We are too often double espresso followers of a decaf Sovereign.

Some forms of waiting — on expressways and in doctor’s offices — are fairly trivial in the overall scheme of things. But there are more serious and difficult kinds of waiting:

The waiting of a single person who hopes God might have marriage in store but is beginning to despair
The waiting of a childless couple who desperately want to start a family
The waiting of Nelson Mandela as he sits in a prison cell for twenty-seven years and wonders if he will ever be free or if his country will ever know justice
The waiting of someone who longs to have work that is meaningful and significant and yet cannot seem to find it
The waiting of a deeply depressed person for a morning when she will wake up wanting to live
The waiting of a child who feels awkward and clumsy and longs for the day when he gets picked first on the playground
The waiting of persons of color for the day when everyone’s children will be judged “not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character”
The waiting of an elderly senior citizen in a nursing home — alone, seriously ill, just waiting to die
Every one of us, at some junctures of our lives, will have to learn to wait.

Waiting may be the hardest single thing we are called to do. So it is frustrating when we turn to the Bible and find that God Himself, who is all-powerful and all-wise, keeps saying to his people, Wait.

Be still before the LORD, and wait patiently for Him… Wait for the LORD, and keep to His way, and He will exalt you to inherit the land.

God comes to Abraham when he is seventy-five and tells him he is going to be a father, the ancestor of a great nation. How long was it before that promise was fulfilled? Twenty-four years. Abraham had to wait.

God told the Israelites that they would leave their slavery in Egypt and become a nation. But the people had to wait four hundred years.

God told Moses he would lead the people to the Promised Land. But they had to wait forty years in the wilderness.

In the Bible, waiting is so closely associated with faith that sometimes the two words are used interchangeably. The great promise of the Old Testament was that a Messiah would come. But Israel had to wait — generation after generation, century after century. And when the Messiah came, He was recognized only by those who had their eyes fixed on his coming — like Simeon. He was an old man who “was righteous and devout. He was waiting for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was upon him.”

But even the arrival of Jesus did not mean that the waiting was over. Jesus lived, taught, was crucified, was resurrected, and was about to ascend when His friends asked Him, “Lord, will you restore the kingdom now?” That is, “Can we stop waiting?”

And Jesus had one more command:

Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised.

And the Holy Spirit came — but that still did not mean that the time of waiting was over.

Paul wrote,

We ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly while we wait for adoption, the redemption of our bodies. For in hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what is seen? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.

Forty-three times in the Old Testament alone, the people are commanded,

Wait. Wait on the LORD.

The last words in the Bible are about waiting:

The one who testifies to these things says, ‘Surely I am coming soon.’

It may not seem like it, but in light of eternity, it is soon. Hang on. “Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!” All right, we’ll hang on. But come! We’re waiting for You.

Why? Why does God make us wait? If He can do anything, why doesn’t He bring us relief and help and answers now?At least in part, to paraphrase Ben Patterson, what God does in us while we wait is as important as what it is we are waiting for.
 

pwettypwecious

Star Member
May 30, 2015
57
1
lagos
Category........
Visa Office......
AVO
NOC Code......
1212
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
01/12/2014
Doc's Request.
14/9/2015
Nomination.....
19/2/2015
AOR Received.
nil
IELTS Request
Sent with app
File Transfer...
19/2/2015
Med's Request
14/9/2015
Med's Done....
21/9/2015
LANDED..........
By GOD's grace
Crazyluv,ed-b-good, Mcsailor, Thorndike4u, silverblade, mrs_o, Bbmj, soundcode, blacky, calgarychic, technolee, bolaopemire.
Thank you so much for the gesture of love. God bless you real good.
@bolaopemire; the joy is indescribable.
@ iamdoingthings, a hearty congratulations to you.
Yokusus you are next in line.
And for the rest of us still waiting, it will end in praise for US ALL. In Jesus name
 

Major

Star Member
May 12, 2015
127
5
Nigeria
Visa Office......
Accra
NOC Code......
2133
App. Filed.......
12-10-2014
Nomination.....
11-01-2015
AOR Received.
11/01/2015
IELTS Request
Submitted with application
File Transfer...
unknown
Med's Request
waiting
Med's Done....
waiting
Passport Req..
waiting
VISA ISSUED...
waiting
LANDED..........
waiting
engrted said:
Plus COT on it. Do your calculation. Also with the new CBN laws now am not sure most banks give PTA cos dey will ask you to use your atm card.

Well, at first Bank, my friends used it and was charged only 1%.
I was told to come the next day for my cash but was told , CBN put a temporary ban on it.
I called at first bank on the 10th of this month and was told the ban is still on.
 

Ebe

Star Member
Sep 7, 2015
80
0
Ibadan
Category........
Visa Office......
Accra
NOC Code......
3112
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
19/12/2014
Doc's Request.
sent all requested document
Nomination.....
11/03/2015
IELTS Request
sent with application
Med's Request
waiting
Lol. You know that feeling now guyman123 @ luvuma its coming very soon.
Guyman1234 said:
Why are worried? Just your first post and you r already worried. Am sure January applicants don't have MR yet, so you should be anticipating, not getting worried. Let them conclude December first and jump to January, then you know you should worried.

But are there really any January apps in the house? Question for the Gods.
Just know you are blessed to be the last month of the last phase of FSWP. Wait till when @ neyobash starts worrying till u start yours, until then, remain happy.
 

DeeBruv

Hero Member
Aug 27, 2014
627
37
Lagos, Nigeria
Category........
Visa Office......
Accra, Ghana AVO
NOC Code......
4011
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
18-08-2014
Doc's Request.
WES FSW Platform update 12-12-2014
Nomination.....
17-12-2014
AOR Received.
17-12-2014
IELTS Request
Sent with Application
Med's Request
29th June 2016
Med's Done....
06-07-2015, Updated forms req and RPRF 17-07-2015, Medicals Received 20-05-2016
Interview........
Waived
Passport Req..
08-06-2016 Pick Up Mail 20-06-2016 ECAS Updated to DECISION MADE 23-06-2016
VISA ISSUED...
20-06-2016
LANDED..........
04-07-2016
My great forumites. I just did this post today to congratulate those with updates and the golden visas. God will be your guide in this bold step to destiny in Canada (our canaan) that flows with milk and honey.
 

BigDon

Star Member
Jun 11, 2015
64
2
Category........
Visa Office......
AVO
NOC Code......
1212
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
1/12/2014
Doc's Request.
14/09/15
Nomination.....
19 febuary,2015
IELTS Request
Sent with App
File Transfer...
19/02/2015
Med's Request
14/09/15
Med's Done....
21/09/15
LANDED..........
2016 By GOD's grace
iamdoingthings said:
The good lord has done it again. MR for me and my family dropped between 12:27 PM & 12:57 PM. I was actually surprised when I saw four emails. I had thought it would be just one email.

App Received: 3rd Dec 2014
PER: 20th Feb 2015
MR: 15th Sept. 2015

All those still expecting any form of update will receive theirs before the end of the week IJN.....Amen.

PS: Is Abuja Clinics "eMedical enabled"?
Congrats,iamdoingthings.It will surely end in praise for you.
 

Bbmj

Star Member
Apr 17, 2015
87
0
Category........
Visa Office......
Accra
NOC Code......
0112
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
11-08-2014
Nomination.....
02-12-2014
Med's Request
16-06-2015
Med's Done....
18-06-2015
Passport Req..
27-08-2015
VISA ISSUED...
14-09-2015
LANDED..........
29-09-2015
CalgaryChic said:
I read this today and it ministered to me..........it take style long shay...... :D

When they got into the boat, the wind ceased. — Matthew 14:32

Waiting is the hardest work of hope. ~ Lewis Smedes

Waiting patiently is not a strong suit in American society.

A woman's car stalls in traffic. She looks in vain under the hood to identify the cause, while the driver behind her leans relentlessly on his horn. Finally she has had enough. She walks back to his car and offers sweetly, “I don't know what the matter is with my car. But if you want to go look under the hood, I'll be glad to stay here and honk for you.”

We are not a patient people. We tend to be in a horn-honking, microwaving, Fed-Ex mailing, fast-food eating, express-lane shopping hurry. People don't like to wait in traffic, on the phone, in the store, or at the post office.

Robert Levine, in a wonderful book called A Geography of Time, suggests the creation of a new unit of time called the honko-second — “the time between when the light changes and the person behind you honks his horn.” He claims it is the smallest measure of time known to science.

Most of us do not like waiting very much, so we like the fact that Matthew shows Jesus to be the Lord of urgent action. Three times in just a few sentences Matthew uses the word immediately — always of Jesus: Jesus made the disciples get into a boat and go on ahead of Him “immediately.” When the disciples thought they were seeing a ghost and cried out in fear, Jesus answered them “immediately.” When Peter began to sink and cried out for help, Jesus “immediately” reached out his hand and caught him.

Jesus' actions are swift, discerning, and decisive. He doesn't waste a honko-second. And yet, this is also a story about waiting. Matthew tells us that Jesus comes to the disciples “during the fourth watch of the night.”

The Romans divided the night into four shifts: 6:00–9:00; 9:00-midnight; midnight–3:00; and 3:00–6:00. So Jesus came to the disciples sometime after 3 o'clock. But they had been in the boat since before sundown the previous day. Why the long delay? If I were one of the disciples, I think I would prefer Jesus to show up at the same time or even slightly ahead of the storm. I'd like Him there in a honko-second.

But Matthew has good reasons for noting the time. A. E. J. Rawlinson notes that early Christians suffering their own storm of persecution may have taken great comfort in this delay:

Faint hearts may even have begun to wonder whether the Lord Himself had not abandoned them to their fate, or to doubt the reality of Christ. They are to learn from this story that they are not forsaken, that the Lord watches over them unseen... [that] the Living One, Master of wind and waves, will surely come quickly for their salvation, even though it be in the “fourth watch of the night.”

Matthew wanted his readers to learn to wait.

Another moment of waiting involves Peter's decision to leave the boat. He cannot do this on the strength of his own impulse; he must ask Jesus' permission first, then wait for an answer — for the light to turn green. I wonder if another type of waiting was involved for Peter. What do you suppose his very first steps on the water looked like? I expect that Jesus was an accomplished water-walker. But for Peter, I wonder if there wasn't a learning curve involved. Maybe, like the Bill Murray character in the movie What About Bob?, he had to start with baby steps.

Learning to walk always requires patience.

It was not until the whole episode was over that the disciples got what they wanted — “the wind died down.” Why couldn't Jesus have made the wind die down “immediately” — as soon as He saw the disciples' fear? It would have made Peter's walk easier. But apparently Jesus felt they would gain something by waiting.

Consider the activity that Peter and the other disciples had to engage in right up to the very end: waiting.

Let's say you decide to get out of the boat. You trust God. You take a step of faith — you courageously choose to leave a comfortable job to devote yourself to God's calling; you will use a gift you believe God has given you even though you are scared to death; you will take relational risks even though you hate rejection; you will go back to school even though people tell you it makes no sense financially; you decide to trust God and get out of the boat. What happens next?

Well, maybe you will experience a tremendous, nonstop rush of excitement. Maybe there will be an immediate confirmation of your decision — circumstances will click, every risk will pay off, your efforts will be crowned with success, your spiritual life will thrive, your faith will double, and your friends will marvel, all in the space of a honko-second. Maybe. But not always. For good reasons, God does not always move at our frantic pace. We are too often double espresso followers of a decaf Sovereign.

Some forms of waiting — on expressways and in doctor's offices — are fairly trivial in the overall scheme of things. But there are more serious and difficult kinds of waiting:

The waiting of a single person who hopes God might have marriage in store but is beginning to despair
The waiting of a childless couple who desperately want to start a family
The waiting of Nelson Mandela as he sits in a prison cell for twenty-seven years and wonders if he will ever be free or if his country will ever know justice
The waiting of someone who longs to have work that is meaningful and significant and yet cannot seem to find it
The waiting of a deeply depressed person for a morning when she will wake up wanting to live
The waiting of a child who feels awkward and clumsy and longs for the day when he gets picked first on the playground
The waiting of persons of color for the day when everyone's children will be judged “not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character”
The waiting of an elderly senior citizen in a nursing home — alone, seriously ill, just waiting to die
Every one of us, at some junctures of our lives, will have to learn to wait.

Waiting may be the hardest single thing we are called to do. So it is frustrating when we turn to the Bible and find that God Himself, who is all-powerful and all-wise, keeps saying to his people, Wait.

Be still before the LORD, and wait patiently for Him... Wait for the LORD, and keep to His way, and He will exalt you to inherit the land.

God comes to Abraham when he is seventy-five and tells him he is going to be a father, the ancestor of a great nation. How long was it before that promise was fulfilled? Twenty-four years. Abraham had to wait.

God told the Israelites that they would leave their slavery in Egypt and become a nation. But the people had to wait four hundred years.

God told Moses he would lead the people to the Promised Land. But they had to wait forty years in the wilderness.

In the Bible, waiting is so closely associated with faith that sometimes the two words are used interchangeably. The great promise of the Old Testament was that a Messiah would come. But Israel had to wait — generation after generation, century after century. And when the Messiah came, He was recognized only by those who had their eyes fixed on his coming — like Simeon. He was an old man who “was righteous and devout. He was waiting for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was upon him.”

But even the arrival of Jesus did not mean that the waiting was over. Jesus lived, taught, was crucified, was resurrected, and was about to ascend when His friends asked Him, “Lord, will you restore the kingdom now?” That is, “Can we stop waiting?”

And Jesus had one more command:

Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift my Father promised.

And the Holy Spirit came — but that still did not mean that the time of waiting was over.

Paul wrote,

We ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly while we wait for adoption, the redemption of our bodies. For in hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what is seen? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.

Forty-three times in the Old Testament alone, the people are commanded,

Wait. Wait on the LORD.

The last words in the Bible are about waiting:

The one who testifies to these things says, ‘Surely I am coming soon.'

It may not seem like it, but in light of eternity, it is soon. Hang on. “Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!” All right, we'll hang on. But come! We're waiting for You.

Why? Why does God make us wait? If He can do anything, why doesn't He bring us relief and help and answers now?At least in part, to paraphrase Ben Patterson, what God does in us while we wait is as important as what it is we are waiting for.
What a beautiful piece CalgaryChic. Thanks for sharing. May the Lord help us to wait on Him at all times
 

iamdoingthings

Full Member
Sep 2, 2015
37
4
Abuja, Nigeria
Visa Office......
Accra
NOC Code......
2172
App. Filed.......
03-12-2014
AOR Received.
PER 20-02-2015
IELTS Request
Sent with application
File Transfer...
20-02-2015
Med's Request
15-09-2015
Med's Done....
28-09-2015 - Additional test Submitted 07-10-2015
Passport Req..
04-03-19
Thanks everyone for the congratulatory messages. It wouldn't be if not for you guys and the wealth of information available in this forum. It shall end in !!!! Praise !!!! for all of us IJN...Amen
 

fisobzy01

Star Member
Apr 16, 2015
64
4
Category........
Visa Office......
AVO
NOC Code......
3112
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
App. Filed.......
24-12-14
Doc's Request.
all documents sent with application
Nomination.....
PER 24-03-15
IELTS Request
sent with application
Med's Request
in view
iamdoingthings said:
The good lord has done it again. MR for me and my family dropped between 12:27 PM & 12:57 PM. I was actually surprised when I saw four emails. I had thought it would be just one email.

App Received: 3rd Dec 2014
PER: 20th Feb 2015
MR: 15th Sept. 2015

All those still expecting any form of update will receive theirs before the end of the week IJN.....Amen.

PS: Is Abuja Clinics "eMedical enabled"?
Congratulations ;D ;D ;D ;D