The "japa" journey runs on rumour, scam agents, and outdated forum threads. Orabo was built as the answer: every standard, requirement, and pathway grounded in primary government sources — not hearsay.
Every eligibility gate, document requirement, and credential evaluation note in Orabo's knowledge base is derived from official government sources — not third-party summaries or immigration forums. When the platform says a document is required, that requirement traces to a specific government policy or regulation.
The primary authorities we build from include:
The AI-generated assessments and petition documents our tools produce cite these regulations directly — including the specific USCIS Policy Manual chapters, CFR sections, and case law (such as Matter of Dhanasar for EB-2 NIW or Kazarian v. USCIS for EB-1A) that govern each visa category.
Immigration rules change. Salary thresholds, processing times, credential evaluation bodies, and treaty agreements are updated by governments, sometimes without notice. Orabo's knowledge base carries a verification timestamp on every eligibility entry — each standard is checked against its primary government source and dated when that check was made.
We review and update entries when rules change: when a government publishes a new policy update, when a recognised credential body is renamed (as happened with UK ENIC / NARIC in 2021), or when a treaty status changes. Entries are not assumed current after a fixed calendar date — they are reviewed against the source that governs them.
Authentication and legalisation chains — the specific steps required to authenticate Nigerian, Ghanaian, Kenyan, or other African documents for use abroad — are verified individually per country against HCCH membership status and consular guidance, because the process differs materially between Hague Convention members and non-members.
Orabo's tools are designed to inform decisions, not to replace professional legal counsel. Every AI-generated output ends with a statement that it is not legal advice and that users should consult a registered immigration adviser for formal guidance before filing.
Assessments are generated fresh from each user's actual profile — they are not boilerplate reports re-skinned with a name. If a profile does not meet a threshold, the assessment says so. An honest "not yet eligible" or "high risk" verdict is the product working correctly.
We also do not hide the limits of an AI-assisted platform. Complex situations — overlapping eligibility, pending application histories, dependent family circumstances — benefit from a qualified adviser. The platform surfaces this at every appropriate point.
Orabo is built and operated by Abiodun (Prince) Bello, founder and CEO of Oraboss Technologies. He is an African professional who relocated to the United States, studied here as an international student, and built Orabo for a reason he understands first-hand: how much of the migration journey depends on bad information.
The same evidence-first, source-cited discipline he applied to enterprise security audits and machine-learning research governs how Orabo's knowledge base is built and kept current. The platform reflects his view that access to accurate, traceable information should not require an expensive agent.
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