Category: Maritime

  • Rice import gives Customs N1b in two months

    Rice import gives Customs N1b in two months

    The suspension of restrictions on the importation of rice through the land borders by the Comptroller-General, Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Col. Hameed Ali (rtd), has paid off.

    The service has raked in N1.178 billion from the 17,596 metric tonnes of the item imported through the borders between October and November, this year.

    Speaking at a strategy session convened by the Service to review revenue performance so far, Ali said out of the N1.2 billion generated by the Service between October and November, N1,178,720,376 was generated from rice.

    Ali approved the suspension of restrictions on land importation of rice on assumption of duty in September, saying the decision was to checkmate the large amount of rice being smuggled through the land borders and the loss of huge revenue that should have acrued to the Federal Government.

    “The huge collection in just two months has vindicated our position. If we had stuck to our previous directive, these much quantum of rice would still have been smuggled and we would have lost over N1 billion revenue at this critical period of our economic down-town,” he said.

    The breakdown of the revenue showed that Idiroko border in Ogun State Command, had the largest volume of 8.276 metric tonnes, with a collection of N555.152 million duty while Katsina border has 3,636 metric tonnes resulting in N242.1 million revenue during the period.

    The Customs boss added that 2.156 metric tonnes of rice was also imported through the land borders of Oyo and Osun commands, generating revenue of N144,278,025. At Seme, Sokoto, Kano, Jigawa, Adamawa and Taraba commands, the service said it generated N143,349,658; N40,162,759; N31,536,148; N16,545,422; N4,710,394 from 2,140,602,248 and 68 metric tonnes.

     

  • NPA, NIMASA, NSC unveil plans for gridlock free port

    NPA, NIMASA, NSC unveil plans for gridlock free port

    FOR long, the traffic gridlock at the Apapa and Tin Can Island ports in Lagos has cost so much loss – in man hours and cash.

    Vehicles often break down and goods get bad. All that will soon end – courtesy of a plan by the authorities.

    Part of the plan is to revive the road system.

    The Managing Director, Nige-rian Ports Authority (NPA), Mallam Habib Abdullahi, the Acting Director-General, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Pastor Haruna Baba Jauro and the Executive Secretary, Nigerian Shippers’ Council, Mr. Hassan Bello, have jointly expressed concern over the gridlock.

    Speaking at a stakeholders’forum organised by the Senate Committee on Marine Transport in Lagos, last week, they said the congestion  needed to be resolved by the government.

    The gridlock, according to them,  is the result of poor access roads leading to the ports, lack of holding bays for trucks, undue dwell time of cargoes and the uncoordinated entry of trucks and tankers into the ports area, among others.

    The popular thinking is that an efficient rail lines linking the ports with other states, would decongest the ports and reduce the pressure on Lagos roads.

    Abdullahi said some policies guiding ports operations should be reviewed.

    He said a lot of work had to be done on the roads leading to the Lagos Port Complex (LPC) and the Tin Can Island Port Complex (TCIPC), adding that the provision of adequate rail lines connecting the ports with major cities remains a major panacea to the gridlock.

    The NPA, he said, is the most affected organisation in the maritime industry.

    Abdullahi said: “The rail lines that used to convey cargoes from the ports to other parts of the country are no longer functioning, the resuscitation of these services will surely reduce the hardship being faced by commuters and other stakeholders,” he said.

    To him, petroleum cargoes coming into the country should be diverted from Lagos to other ports because the initial design of the ports was far below the volume of cargoes they are forced to handle. He called for the relocation of the petroleum tank farms from Apapa because of the danger they pose to the ports.

    Transportation of petroleum products by rail from the Lagos ports to the North, particularly Kano, which he witnessed as a youth, Abdullahi said, no longer exist. He, therefore, called on the relevant authorities to rise up to this challenge.

    Besides, he suggested that petroleum products could be pumped through the pipes from the ports to other areas.

    “I want to appeal to this committee not to look at the transportation sector alone, but at other policies that affects the economy as well, especially the importation of petroleum products into the country.

    “Must it be only Lagos, why can’t we divert some vessels to other neighbouring ports, why can’t we come up with new ideas like piping of these petroleum products, this will reduce a lot of vehicular movements around the ports.

    “The port was built several years ago and anywhere there are port activities, there is huge economic and environmental effect. Apapa is now a commercial area with banks as well as other activities going on there. The roads leading to the port now serve the West African sub region, because of these activities there is always congestion. You don’t have to look at the roads alone, but at other factors, the rail transport and inter-modalism are very important,” he said.

    Abdullahi urged the Federal Ministry of Works to fix the roads leading to the ports. “I am happy the works ministry has owned up to their responsibility. It is their responsibility to take care of that road, it is also the responsibility of the Lagos State Government to provide security, and to develop other connecting roads,” Abdullahi said.

    On his part, the Acting Director- General, NIMASA lamented the effect of the gridlock on the economy, saying  that staff productivity had been affected as they are being emotionally and physically drained or harassed by armed robbers on their way to and from work.

    The NIMASA boss bemoaned a situation where  staff of the agency were being forced to sleep in hotels at Apapa because of the gridlock.

    The Executive Secretary of NSC corroborated NPA’s position  and lent his voice to trucking policy that would set standards and regulations.

    According to him, between 5,000 and 7,000 trucks ply the Apapa corridor every day, while about 2,000 or 3,000 trucks are needed daily at the corridor. The remaining trucks, Bello said, are constituting nuisance and delaying vehicular movement in the area.

    The NSC boss called for the immediate repair of all the failed sections of the road leading to Apapa to ease the congestion; registration of trucks coming to Apapa with their company’s name; stoppage of rickety trucks from entering the ports; building of new deep seaports; installation of electronic gate; issuance of call-up cards to truck drivers and institutionalisation of a legal framework that will give more powers to the agencies and punish the offenders.

    The Chairman of the Committee and former Zamfara State governor, Senator Yerima Ahmed Sani,  said the committee embarked on the exercise as a result of the resolutions of the Senate expressing concern about the gridlock.

    The committee, he said, would leave no stone unturned in ensuring that the Apapa gridlock is solved.

    He called on stakeholders to come up with suggestions on how best to combat the menace, pointing out that whatever affects the efficiency of the port affects the nation’s economy

     

  • SON  to open 20 labs in Lagos

    SON to open 20 labs in Lagos

    THE Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) will inaugurate 20 world-class laboratories in Lagos to check the importation of sub-standard products, its Director-General, Dr Joseph Odumodu has said.

    He made the disclosure at a sensitisation event SON organised for members of the National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders (NAGAFF), in Lagos.

    Odumodu said the training became necessary to carry the freight forwarders along in the e-transaction process.

    He said the laboratories and refurbished ones would help  reduce importation and production of sub-standard goods.

    Odumodu said the  event would also boost the participants’ integration into trade facilitation.

    “There is no way we can achieve the mandate of SON if we do not carry the critical stakeholders along in our programmes,” he said.

    He said they were making efforts to ensure a further reduction of sub-standard goods in the country.

    Founder, NAGAFF, Boniface Aniebonam, urged freight forwarders and clearing agents to collaborate with the agency to reduce sub-standard products in the market.

     

  • Yuletide: Customs deploys 40 officers in Seme, Idiroko

    Yuletide: Customs deploys 40 officers in Seme, Idiroko

    The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Federal Operation Unit (FOU) Zone ‘A’, Ikeja, has deployed over 40 officers to Seme and Idiroko borders.

    The move, it was gathered, is in line with the Comptroller-General of Customs, Col. Hameed Ibrahim Ali’s resolve to check the movement of unauthorised goods, especially those on the Import Prohibition List ((IPL) and persons, into the country through the borders this Yuletide.

    Investigation around the borders on Saturday revealed that the 0Customs  moved against illegal importation of rice, illicit drugs, vegetable oil, textile, used clothes, confectionery, juices, used bags and other prohibited items.

    It was gathered that the rate of smuggling of goods from Benin Republic into the country through the borders has reduced because officers of the Unit have increased foot patrol along the bush paths and raised its level of intelligence gathering for preventing, interdicting and uncompromising arrests of smugglers.

    When The Nation visited the borders last weekend, Customs officers from the FOU were on patrol.

    When The Nation left for the Seme border around 4.30am last Saturday, apart from the skeletal checkpoints mounted by the police on the road, Customs officers were seen at Mile 2, Iyana-Iba, Igbo Elerin, Okoko, besides Federal Government College, Ijanikin, Mowo and  other points on the route.

    At the Idiroko border, most of the vehicles were stopped by Customs officers, who searched and seized contrabands, including small quantities of rice and cartons of frozen chicken from traders and those who pretended to be travellers.

    Sources said small bags of rice, from 10kg to 25kg, are stored in commercial quantities by some travellers, who later move them into the markets.

    The move, investigation revealed, has made the Officer-in- Charge of Surveillance, Mr Jude Ohagwu, and his team unpopular among many trans-border traders and travellers.

    Customs Public Relations Officer Mr Uche Ejesieme said the Area Controller, Sani Madugu, has set in motion a system that makes the fight against smuggling more serious.

    He said the surveillance became possible because of the vehicles given to them.

    Ejesieme reiterated the unit’s commitment to ensuring smuggling and other anti-economic activities are stopped.

    Some officers led by Ohagwu, he  said, made some seizures.

    Ohagwu, Ejesieme also said, gathers information on criminals’ movements in and around the borders.

    He assured that the tempo of patrols, and arrests of offenders of the Customs and Excise Management Act (CEMA) would not only be sustained but surpassed.

    Ejesieme warned that officers and men from the unit would uphold the Comptroller-General’s zero tolerance for smuggling, assuring stakeholders in legitimate trans border trade of Customs’ support and cooperation.

    “We have officers and men who are happy to carry out their jobs and that is why they have been up and doing. We have re-strategised. Our officers and men have been mandated by our Area Controller, Sani Madugu to comb all the bush paths around the border areas  and  find all the new hide-out of smugglers who specialised in bringing into the country all prohibited items like second hand clothing, bags, shoes, frozen chicken, bags of rice, used tyres and other items through the land and the swampy area,” he said.

     

  • Make Cabotage Fund public, Amaechi, NIMASA urged

    Make Cabotage Fund public, Amaechi, NIMASA urged

    What is the size of the Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF) domiciled with the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA)? How much interest has accrued on the fund? How much has been spent from it and for what?

    These are the posers indigenous ship owners and other stakeholders want Minister of Transport Rotimi Amaechi and Acting Director-General of nimasa Pastor Haruna Baba Jauro to answer.

    The CVFF was created by the Coastal and Inland Shipping (Cabotage) Act, 2003, to promote ship acquisition by supporting ship owners.

    Section 42, Part VIII of Section 44 of the Act empowers NIMASA to collect and administer the fund, under guidelines by the Minister of Transport, after approval by the National Assembly.

    Sources at the Federal Ministry of Transport alleged at the weekend that part of the N50 billon CVFF fund has been spent without visible development in the industry.

    The money, the senior official said, should be disbursed, if it has not gone down the drain.

    The fund, the official said, was established 12 years ago to boost local content in the shipping industry.

    Ship owners, who spoke with The Nation, said they want Amaechi and Pastor Jauro to publish the amount  realised by NIMASA from the management of the fund.

    A counsel to one of the shipping firms, Mr Dipo Alaka, said the call became necessary following the arraignment of a former Director-General of the agency, Mr Patrick Akpobolokemi, by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) last week.

    Akpobolokemi was arraigned with nine others, including two companies, before Justice Saliu Saidu of the Federal High Court in Lagos.

    They were accused of converting N3.4 billion belonging to NIMASA to themselves.

    The lawyer alleged that the CVFF has grown to billions of dollars without any shipping firm benefitting from it.

    Alaka lamented that most contributors do not know the actual amount in NIMASA’s care, saying it was time for the Minister and the new management of the agency declared the amount since it is not the source but just a collector of the fund.

    Alaka told The Nation that his clients were sad that they did  not benefit from the fund.

    A maritime bank, he said, would be more appropriate to handle the CVFF, adding that NIMASA should not  keep the fund anymore.

    “The only way the APC-led Federal Government can support the maritime sector is funding, but since the first National Maritime Authority (NMA) Act was created up till NIMASA, all the money that have been allocated for the CVFF, not a dime has been released, showing that there is a problem with the agency saddled with the management of the fund.

    “Unconfirmed source within the agency told my clients that a huge part of the money was tinkered with by a former DG during the last presidential election. If the allegation is true, that was wrong because the money does not belong to NIMASA. The objective was using it to develop local shipping industry,” he said.

    He wondered how many could say the NMA or NIMASA supported them to buy a ship.

    Alaka challenged NIMASA’s Acting DG to tell Nigerians the actual amount in the fund and why the money had not been disbursed.

    Also, Lagos State Shippers Association President Rev Jonathan Nicol said the non-disbursement of the fund by NIMASA was wrong, urging the management of the agency to disburse it and take steps to streamline and profile Nigerian ship owners.

     

  • CBN, NPA, others to implement Cargo Tracking Note

    CBN, NPA, others to implement Cargo Tracking Note

    •Council to review Inland Depots policy 

    THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) and the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) will implement the International Cargo Tracking Note (ICTN), The Nation has learnt.

    ICTN is a security measure for checking cargoes coming to the country.

    Revenues generated from its execution will go to the Federation Account. The proposal for the management of the fund, findings revealed, has been submitted to Minister of Transport Rotimi Amaechi.

    Also, a former Director-General, Government Inspectorate of Shipping, Mr Olu Akinsoji, said the ICTN would reduce corruption and promote security and integrity of cargoes.

    He said the ICTN would also increase Foreign Direct Investments (FDI), prevent dumping or diversion of cargoes and create room for efficient collection of revenues.

    Akinsoji, the acting chairman, Society of Nigerian Mariners (SNM) and former administrator of Maritime Academy of Nigerian in Oron, Akwa Ibom State, said: “Many countries are operating the regime and are enjoying the benefits.The CTN will reduce corruption and promote security and integrity of cargo,” he said.

    Speaking with reporters in Lagos, Director of Commercial Shipping Services of the Council, Mrs. Dabney Shall-Holma, said the CBN team would operate from the first and second floors of the headquarters of the Council in Apapa.

    The team with the Customs is expected to offload real-time information received from the ICTN onto the Nigeria Customs Information System (NICIS) for processing.

    Mrs. Shall-Holma said the ICTN would assist the government to ensure transparency in the system of shipping, and check under-declaration, leakages and conspiracies.

    ‘’It is real time information that will be made available and will be received instantaneously and offloaded to the Customs NCIS.

    “Right now, we are working with a team from CBN to do the offloading on our behalf. That is why the second and first floors have been dedicated for that purpose, so that we can ensure that the benefits  from Cargo Tracking Note would truly accrue and government revenue will increase.

    “Apart from ensuring that there is transparency on revenue earned, we are looking at under-declaration, leakages and conspiracies here and there, and unrecorded vessels calling at the ports,” she said.

    Mrs. Shall-Holma said ICTN is  rigid, so when information about a vessel bound for Nigeria is filed, the NSC will know within two hours. If there is any variance in the information on under-declaration, the NSC can quickly inform relevant authorities, such as the Customs, NPA and the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA).

    She said ICTN would eliminate  fraud. “We would now be able to block leakages and wastages.”

    Meanwhile, the Executive Secretary of the Council, Mr Hassan Bello, has said the agency is reviewing the viability of some Inland Container Deports (ICDs).

    “We are reviewing the policy of Inland Container Deports (ICDs), and we will ensure that some of them become operational by next year. The Plateau State Governor had visited us over the ICD and we appreciate his visit.

    “We are also looking at Kebbi, Bauchi, Osun, Enugu and other states to determine their viability. Our policy is not just to have ICDs all over the country, we need to talk with Customs because they are very important.

    “Customs appearance in those inland ports would be determined by the traffic of goods coming to such depots and the volumes they can handle.

    “So, it is important to note that it is not strictly a Shippers’ Council thing but an industry issue; we need cooperation of stakeholders, such as Customs and terminal operators. There must be connectivity between the seaport and the inland container depots and we are also asking the states to provide basic infrastructure like access roads to make them attractive for business.”

     

  • Govt to introduce operating standards at ports

    Govt to introduce operating standards at ports

    •UNDP assesses NIMASA, Customs, Immigration, others

    TO combat corruption at the ports, the Federal Government is to introduce Standard Operating Procedures (SOP).

    Under the SOP regime, importers will know operators’ services; their types of business; how they do it; how long it takes them to deliver and their scope.

    The plan followed the submission of the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP’s)  report on its assessment of risks at the ports to the Federal Government.

    The assessment, it was gathered, is an anti-corruption report on agencies at the ports.

    The agencies are the Nigerian Shippers’ Council  (NSC), Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA),  Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Port Health, terminal operators and other agencies at the ports.

    The government has raised a committee, comprising the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), Transparency Unit of  Government and anti-corruption agency in Nigeria  (TUGA) and UNDP to fashion the SOP.

    A senior official of the Federal Ministry of Transport, who pleaded not to be named, said the  SOP would promote transparency, accountability, efficiency and good services at the ports.

    All the ports’ agencies, he said, are expected to submit their operation manuals to the NSC for harmonisation.

    The official said: “The UNDP funded the original risk assessment report, which is an anti-corruption report. After the assessment of the risks in the Nigerian ports, the committee was set up, asking everyone to submit their SOPs and the Nigerian Shippers’ Council as port economic regulator was appointed to harmonise it.

    “The SOP involves the terminal operators and other organisations that are operating within the ports.

    “The purpose of the SOP is for port users, stakeholders and the public to know what each of the agencies is doing in the port. For officers, who are also operating in the port, it’s a guide for them to know what they should do, and the core point is to promote transparency, accountability, efficiency and good services.

    “The SOP is an integrity plan given to the NSC to harmonise the SOPs from every organisation operating in the port. The SOP was not drew up by the NSC, it was submitted to it by all the organisations.After the submission of all SOPs, it would be harmonised by the NSC in form of a manual that would be made public. Printed copies and on-line version of it would be made available to all stakeholders, operators, agencies and the general public for easy accessibility so that anywhere you are in the world, if you want to know the standard operating procedures at any Nigerian port, you just click on it, and it will show without any difficulty.”

    A member of the committee Ms Asuka Ogo said the committee had agreed to launch the SOP in all the ports of the country to promote transparency and reduce corruption.

    “The document would soon be launched as soon as the Minister of Transport is through with it.

    “SOP will give a time line within which any organisation operating at the ports will carry out its responsibility. It will spell-out the time each agency will carry out its function.

    “It will reduce frustration and allow people to know the actual role of each agency and that of the terminal operators. For instances, there are some of the terminals that handle general cargo, there is RoRo and there are others. There is SOP for each type of operation.

    “SOP will also resolve the issue of boarding of vessels on arrival and who should board? It will allow agencies to their work normally unless there is a problem.

    ‘’It will allow you to know why something is happening at the ports based on the knowledge you have acquired through the SOP. It would make port operations to be transparent. By the time we receive approval, it would be launched in Abuja, Tin-Can, Apapa, Onne, Rivers, Calabar and Warri ports,” she added.

  • Customs siezes N187m goods

    Customs siezes N187m goods

    The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Federal Operations Unit Zone ‘A’ Ikeja, has seized over 3,465 cartons of smuggled frozen poultry products valued at N15,615,000.

    The unit also seized over 10,000 50kg bags of rice valued at N50,145,000.

    Other items, such as vehicles, new and used textile materials, soaps, wine and sugar, were also seized.

    The Duty paid value of all the items seized, according to the unit, is N187, 103, 700.

    Its Area Controller, Sani Madugu said the unit would leave no stone unturned in the campaign against smuggling.

    He attributed the successes in the past one week to the synergy between his team leaders.

    Madugu described the team leaders as committed officers with impressive antecedents and pedigree, worthy of commendation.

    He promised to bring his experience as Commandant of the Customs College, Ikeja to bear on his job.

    The controller  also promised to develop appropriate templates in line with the change mantra of the Comptroller-General of Customs, Col. Hameed Ibrahim Ali (Rtd).

    Smugglers would be arrested and prosecuted, he said.

     

  • How Ali can raise Customs revenue target

    How Ali can raise Customs revenue target

    • Comptroller-General urged to push for duty benchmark on used vehicles

    TO achieve his aim of higher revenue, Customs Comptroller-General (CCG) Col. Hameed Ali must curb the excesses of his men and ensure the adoption  of a duty benchmark on fairly used vehicles, (Tokunbo)

    For years, the customs has operated without a benchmarty for used vehicles. The agency fixes duty as will, depending on who is importing.

    It was learnt that Nigeria loses cargoes to ports of neighbouring countries because many importers don’t know the actual duty  on used vehicles.

    Some officers are exploiting the absence of a clearcut policy on  benchmark to extort importers and their agents despite Ali’s warnings against corruption.

    A senior  Federal Ministry of Finance (FMoF)  official claimed that some Customs officers  were working against making the ports unattractive for business.

    The official urged the Minister of Transport Rotimi Amaechi, his counterpart in Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun and Ali to design anti-corruption policies that will stem the loss of cargoes from Nigeria to neighbouring countries ports.

    The absence of a benchmark has created opportunities for Customs officials to take bribes from importers and their clearing agents, he said.

    “Despite the age limit imposed on imported Tokunbo vehicles, it is sad that no Nigerian bringing any type of the approved vehicle into the country knows the actual amount he or she is going to pay as Customs duty. But the situation is not so in our neighbouring ports. At Apapa and Tin-Can ports, direct interaction between clearing agents and Customs officials is on the high side since most clearing documentation on used vehicles are not processed online’’.

    Clearance documentations, according to the source, are submitted in person.

    He continued:”This high level of corruption in our ports is affecting the efforts of the management of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) to reposition the ports for better efficiency and the hub in the sub-region. Corrupt practices are also jeopardising the ability of the Nigerian Shippers Council (NSC) to secure commercial opportunities in cargo transport to nearby landlocked countries.

    “Despite the successful ports concession programme of the Federal Government, the concession benefit is hampered by corruption, poor infrastructure and the high cost of doing business.”

    The source blamed  the ports’ bureaucracy  for the problem, sahying: “The bribery takes two forms: Collusive corruption, where the clearing agents and Customs officials benefit from an illicit deal, such as paying to evade duty, and coercive bribery or extortion, which benefit only corrupt Customs official.”

    He added: “Apart from the fact that the government is losing revenue from the ports, the loss of trade also meants that the nation’s sea ports are missing out on the wider benefits that come from imported goods, such as technology, and their potential to help encourage economic growth and port development.”

    Amaechi, Mrs Adeosun and Ali,  they said, must design policies to reduce  corrupt officials,  contact with  companies at the ports.

    “Other ports are now using online system to submit clearance documentation, which has resulted in  significant reduction in corruption. All government agencies and terminal operators at ports must be compelled to key into the “electronic single window introduced recently by  NPA,” the official said.

    Contacted,  Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA) President Prince Olayiwola Shittu urged Ali to collaborate with agents to win his anti-corruption crusade

    “It is sad to say that while Col Ali is making efforts to get the grasp of Customs, he has neglected his immediate constituency which are Licensed Customs Agents. Who today, are the key to his achieving the zero tolerance for corruption. It takes two to tangle.

    “Customs officers are paid and remunerated to ensure that nobody short-change the system, but there are people who also offer them opportunities to short change the government and you find them among Customs officers, importers and some clearing agents.

    “There are immediate steps the CG needs to take now to nip corruption in the bud. One of the first things he needs to do is to ensure that there is a bench mark on used vehicles. The bench mark being used by Customs gives room for corruption because it is not publicised. For instance, if you want to buy a vehicle from abroad and you already know how much you are paying, it is better  you pay everything to government without giving anybody bribe to get the vehicle out of the ports,” he said.

    He added: “The situation at the port now is that those who are ready to do things in the right way are being frustrated so that they will abandon the right way and join the bad gang in order to intimidate you to part with some money.”

    According to him, the is the major problem confronting importers and clearing agents at the ports. “When you pay your correct duty you suffer for it. And the CG needs to look into it and ask why it happened that way?

    “If everybody knows the amount is going to pay, there wouldn’t be the need to bribe any Customs officer before moving your vehicle out of the ports.  The reason why it is not done, no importer or clearing agent can explain,” Shittu said.

     

  • Lekki, Calabar ports strategic, says NPA

    Lekki, Calabar ports strategic, says NPA

    The  dredging of the Calabar Port is vital to the economy, the Nigerian Port Authority (NPA) has said.

    NPA Managing Director, Mallam Habib Abdullahi is also working to ensure that the Lekki Deep Seaport becomes operational, the General Manager, Public Affairs, Captain Iheanacho Ebubuogu said.

    The Lekki Deep Seaport and Calabar Port are strategically important to  the country and its economy Ebubuogu said, adding that the country’s, coastal waterways, which are supposed to be a veritable means of economic transformation, have seen neglected

    Processes, he said,  were on to ensure that the Ibom Port gets transaction agents.

    “With the dredging, the economic activities, especially within the two zones, have sprung up again, creating massive employment opportunities in the area and in the whole country,” he said.

    He said the creation of more ports was in line with the Federal Government agenda in diversifying the economy, adding that a maintenance firm was appointed to manage the Calabar channel. He urged the private sector to fully tap into the inherent economic benefits.

    He lauded the Federal Government’s efforts in ensuring that life was brought back to hitherto comatose projects, such as railway system and inland waterways and assured that the Eastern rail line from Port-Harcourt -Maiduguri, which is under rehabilitation, would be completed.

    “ The Managing Director Mallam Habib Abdullahi is working to make the port a transit point by  ensuring that the rail track at Lagos port is linked to the national line to reduce pressure on the road.

    “We all need to commend the efforts of the Federal Government in developing more ports across the country and the proposed change in the transport system to facilitate trade and boost the economy.

    “Nigerians will recognise the laudable efforts of the Federal Government by the time the Badagry and Lekki Deap seaports come on stream,” he said.