Tag: customs

  • Suspected smuggler killed in clash with Customs at Ogun

    •Vehicles vandalised         •NCS official injured

    A suspected smuggler was killed yesterday and an operative of the Federal Operation Unit (FOU) of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) injured in a clash with the  Customs and at Sango toll gate end of Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway, Ogun State.

    Five operation vehicles o the suspected smugglers, who were assisted by hoodlums.

    The Nation learnt the incident occurred when smugglers, ambushed a convoy of the NCS, ferrying to Lagos about 45 bags of seized rice and 258 cartons of poultry products, reportedly smuggled into the country from the Republic of Benin.

    It was gathered that for over an hour, there was confusion at the toll gate. Traders and passers-by scampered for safety as Customs officers and smugglers engaged in a gun duel.

    A source said when news of the killing of the suspect reached his colleagues in Atan, Sango-Ota, they stormed the Customs checkpoint on Sango-Idi Iroko Road and allegedly vandalised five vehicles belonging to the Customs and the public.

    NCS spokesman Abdulahi Maiwada, who confirmed the incident, said one officer was injured by hoodlums, while five vehicles were vandalised, with one of them set ablaze.

    He said three of the vehicles belonged to the Customs, while two were owned by individuals.

    Maiwada said the Federal Operating Unit from Ikeja, Lagos, impounded two vehicles loaded with bags of rice and cartons of turkey in Sango, but the smugglers ambushed them  on their way to Lagos.

    FOU spokesman Jerry Attah confirmed the attack on Customs officers.

    He said: “Our officers were ambushed and attacked on their way to office after seizing frozen chickens and imported rice.”

    Attah also confirmed that a Customs patrol vehicle was set ablaze and officers beaten up.

    He said: “Two of the three vehicles loaded with rice and the ones that carried chickens are in our custody. One Mazda 626 car registered as KTU504AL and a Volkswagen car with no number plate are in our warehouse.”

    Ogun State police spokesman Abimbola Oyeyemi confirmed the incident.

    He said: “We have restored peace and investigation has begun.”

     

  • Customs moves to reduce half trade facilitation time

    Customs moves to reduce half trade facilitation time

    The Nigeria Customs Service will reduce the time it takes to import and export goods (trade facilitation) by 50 per cent.
    Its Public Relations Officer, Joseph Attah, disclosed this in a statement yesterday.
    According to him, the service is required to schedule and coordinate the Mandatory Joint Examinations and sign-off Form to ensure only one point of contact between importers and officials.
    He explained as a key stakeholder in the federal government’s quest to make businesses work, the Customs has joined other MDAs in delivering reforms that would progressively make it easier for businesses in Nigeria to start and thrive.
    Attah said: “Our commitments at the NCS are focused on ‘Trade Across Borders’ where a target was set to reduce import and export time by up to 50 percent and ensure that import procedures adhere to international standards.
    “One of the most crucial functions of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) is the promotion and facilitation of trade and competitiveness.
    “We will be the first to admit that the reality at the Nigerian ports is challenging and can be improved upon.”
    In its bid to improve the facilitation, NCS said that the minimum cargo placement notice time for examination required by Terminal Operators has been reduced from 24 hours to a maximum of twelve hours.
    This, said Attah, means that after the NCS agrees with all parties on a suitable time for physical examination, Terminal Operatorsonly require a twelve hour notice to place the cargo for examination.

    The statement noted that whereas export processes average between two and three weeks in Nigeria, compared to only four days in Kenya.
    According to Attah, Nigeria requires up to fourteen documents for imports, compared to just five in Rwanda.
    Factors like these, said the spokesman, are responsible for the country’s lowly rank of 14th out of 15 ECOWAS economies and 182nd out of 190 economies worldwide in the ‘Trade Across Borders’ indicator on the most recent World Bank “Doing Business” Rankings.

  • Customs destroy N1bn worth of imported poultry

    The Nigeria Customs Service, Federal Operations Unit (FOU) Zone C Owerri, covering the Southeast and South-South states, yesterday destroyed impounded frozen poultry products with Duty Paid Value of N1, 275,712,500.

    The 102, 099 cartons of frozen poultry products, which were intercepted at various points within the zone, were said to be illegally imported.

    The Customs Area Controller in charge of FOU Zone ‘C’, Comptroller Mohammed Uba, said the figure was the total of seizures of poultry products made by the zone since he assumed duty in October 2016, adding that the impounded products had been destroyed in accordance with government policy.

  • Customs redeploy 48 officers

    Customs redeploy 48 officers

    In an ongoing reform at the Nigerian Customs Service (NCS)The Controller General of Customs Col. Hameed Ali (Rtd) has approved the redeployment of some controllers of customs.

    This was contained in a statement issued on Thursday by The NCS Public Relations Officer, Joseph Attah.

    According to the statement, in a major re-jigging of the Service for effective and efficient service deliverythe Comptroller-General of Customs approved the redeployment of 48 Comptrollers of the service

    It also revealed that some of the officers who have been moved includes:Comptroller Madugu, M.J from Sokoto/Kebbi/Zamfara to Ogun Command, Comptroller Udo-aka, E.A from Investigation to Oyo/Osun Command and Compt. Isiyaku, K from Tariff and Trade to Port Harcourt 1 among others. 

    According to the statementthe Comptroller-General’s Compliance team has been disbanded and a new team reconstituted. The new Compliance team is divided into three. Team A for Western Axis, B for Northern axis and C for Eastern axis. They are to complement the Federal Operations Units in order to vigorously crackdown on all forms of smuggling activities nationwide with particular focus on the enforcement of non-importation of rice and vehicles through the land borders.

    The new CGC’s Compliance team will be coordinated by Comptroller Azarema, A.A who before now has been the Comptroller License and Permit at the NCS HQ. The Axis will be led by Assistant Comptrollers of Customs.

    While calling on relevant stake holders to support the service by being compliantthe CGC expressed his determination to strategically re-position the Service as a crucial contributor to the success story of the nation,he added that all revenues must be collected, leaving no room for leakages

  • Customs remove HND dichotomy, promotes 3487 officers

    Customs remove HND dichotomy, promotes 3487 officers

    Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) officers who are holders of Higher National Diploma (HND), on Monday received good news from the Comptroller General, Col. Hameed Ali, who raised their salary grade from 07 to level 08.

    The Customs boss, who decorated some of the 3,487 senior officers that were newly promoted in Abuja, told them that their promotion was purely on merit and a call for more work.

    He also announced that the rank structure of the Nigeria Customs Service has been aligned with that of the Nigeria Police Force (NPF).

    The decisions, according to him, were expected to boost the morale of the officers and eliminate confusion in the seniority of officers.

    His words: “In compliance with circular Ref: HCSF/EIR/CND/100/ST/98 of 8th September, 2016 from Head of Service of the Federation and the approval of Government since April 1992 for the Nigeria Customs Service to align with the Nigeria Police Force rank restructure and in fulfillment of the CGC’s mandate to reorganize and reform the Nigeria Customs Service. The CGC has directed as follows:

    [quote font_size=”18″ color=”#000000″ bgcolor=”#dda552″ bcolor=”#dd3333″ arrow=”yes”]“i) All HND holders currently on salary grade level 07 are automatically moved to salary grade level 08. Supplementary budget will be made for payment of arrears of salary;

    ii) The rank structure of the service is aligned with the Nigeria Police Force forthwith;

    iii) Officers in the Inspectorate Cadre on Salary Level 08 and above are to align to appropriate rank in the Superintendent Cadre.[/quote]

    “This is expected to boost the morale of officers and eliminate confusion in the seniority of officers.”

    Ali told the officers that the days of basing promotion on sentiments are over, stressing leverage of federal character that they enjoy at the point of entry, what counts soon after that is merit and hard-work.

    He said that the promoted officers which include the Public Relations Officer, Mr. Joseph Attah that is now a Deputy Comptroller, do not owe anyone any gratitude except God and their efforts that earned them the promotion.

    The Comptroller General said: “we had in the past promoted people who did not deserve it and that was what we met in the management. But now merit is key to your promotion.”

    He also announced that the Customs and Command College, will in June commence operation as a full command.

  • Customs restricts rice import in free trade zones

    Customs restricts rice import in free trade zones

    Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) Comptroller-General,Col. Hameed Ali (retd), has restricted rice import in trade free zones.

    Public Relations Officer of the service, Mr. Joseph Attah, made this known to reporters in Abuja at the weekend.

    He said the restriction became necessary because some operators were taking undue advantage of the trade zone, which allows them to import some quantity of rice.

    “So, if we block the land borders and allow operators of free trade zone to bring in rice through the seaports, then our efforts at the land borders will be in vain,” he said.

    He said smuggling is a crime like armed robbery,, urging Nigerians to treat it so.

    On efforts by the NCS in tackling smuggling, Attah said: “We have the commands  covering those border lines. We also have the federal operation units that cover these land borders and to build another layer of policing, we have what we call the compliance team.

    “It might interest you to know that this compliance team headed by an Assistant Comptroller, Musa Jalo, made a total of 921 seizures with a duty paid value of over N1billion. Most of these seizures are rice and vehicles.

  • Auctioneers tackle Customs on e-auction

    Auctioneers tackle Customs on e-auction

    The Nigerian Association of Auctioneers (NAA) has faulted the decision of the Nigerian Customs Service to sell forfeited goods through electronic-auction.

    The body, in a statement by its spokesman, Goke Adedokun, said the decision was against the law.

    The statement reads: “The Nigeria Association of Auctioneers kicks against the plan of disposal of the overtime cargoes, container and cars by Nigeria Customs.

    “The auction which was planned to be carried out through the internet is contrary to the procurement Act of 2007.

    “In 1970s, registered auctioneers were used to decongest the ports. Consequently, in America where e- auction is practiced, it goes along with open bidding process and the service of auctioneers is strictly employed.

    “Moreover, the NAA wish to remind NCS that we have over 3000 registered auctioneers in Nigeria who pay taxes, renew their professional licences yearly and of course some were registered by the present Customs administration with the sums of #5,000 each to carry out the auction sale of forfeited goods.”

  • Customs seizes N178m medicament, N250m contraband in Imo

    Customs seizes N178m medicament, N250m contraband in Imo

    The Federal Operations Unit (FOU) in Zone C of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has intercepted consignments of medicament including the banned Tramadol, with a duty paid value (DPV) of N178,209,310.

    Other unregistered drugs were also impounded.

    Contraband impounded across the zone in March included foreign rice, used shoes, machine spare parts with a DPV of N112,617,700.

    The Customs Area Controller in charge of FOU in Zone C (Owerri), Comptroller Mohammed Garba, displayed the consignments during a media briefing.

    He said the unit recovered N48,742,845, being the underpayments within the time under review.

    Garba said NCS remained resolute in protecting the wellbeing of Nigeria through its statutory duties.

    The Customs chief said the unit made 17 seizures comprising various contraband with DPV of N112,617,700 in March.

    He said the unit, during its anti-smuggling operations in March, also intercepted and detained a huge consignment of medicament estimated at N178,209,310 in duty paid value.

    This brought the duty paid value for seizures and goods in its custody in March to N250,951,010.

    Giving a further breakdown, the Comptroller said the unit recorded 2,455 bags of rice with DPV of N77,558,800; 1,266 foot wear with DPV of N6,076,800; 307 used tyres with DPV of N3,789,600; 100 bags of used shoes with DPV of N8,100,000; 40 bales of used clothing with DPV of N5,280,000 and three vehicles with DPV of N4,050,000.

    On the medicament intercepted in the Agbor axis of the zone, Garba said they included 268 cartons of Tramadol, 202 cartons of Pullegra, 36 cartons of Reall Octra and 928 packets of Tramadol.

    The Customs chief said a sample of the various medicament had been sent to the National Agency for Foods and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) for tests and verification while the consignment was being detained for further investigations.

    He said: “The nefarious activities of smugglers endanger the health and safety of Nigerians, affect the economy and even pose a threat to national security.”

  • ‘Customs responsible for 82% of ports charges’

    ‘Customs responsible for 82% of ports charges’

    • Over one million jobs created since concession

    The Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) and other government agencies account for the huge cost of doing business at the ports, Nigeria’s leading accounting firm, Akintola Williams Deloitte, has said.

    It stated this in an industry report titled: “Public Private Partnership (PPP) As an anchor for diversifying the Nigeria economy, which it has just published.

    The report, which was based on a case study of the Lagos Container Terminals Concession,  lamented  that Customs processes are responsible for about 82.1 per cent of the charges incurred by consignees.

    Akintola Williams Deloitte stated that its value chain analysis of a 20-foot container laden with cargo worth N44.42million ($100,000 equivalent) imported into Nigeria from China, revealed that about N6.5million would be required to clear and transport the container out of the port. It said of this, about N5.3million (representing 82.1 per cent) is paid to the NCS as Import Duty, Comprehensive Import Supervision Scheme (CISS), Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Trade Liberalisation Scheme (ETLS), Port Development Surcharge and Value Added Tax (VAT).

    It listed other actors in the value chain to include shipping companies, Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), terminal operators, clearing companies and hjaulage services providers.

    It said shipping companies are responsible for 13.8 per cent of the port cost (N897,000); terminal operators 1.8 per cent (N117,000); Customs 82.1 per cent (N5.3million); transporters 1.1 per cent (N71,500) and clearing agents (N78,000).

    According to the report, “the value chain of a typical container terminal operations, begins with the shipment of the goods through a shipping line to the host country. The consignee pays the freight charges for the shipping as well as the container deposit fees. Demurrage charges may apply where the consignee fails to return the containers on time.

    “Upon arrival of the container at the Nigeria port, the consignees pays terminal handling charges, storage charges, delivery charges and customs examination charges to the terminal operators. In addition, the Consignees also pay the relevant customs import duty and for logistics services to get the goods out of the terminal.”

    Notwithstanding their huge investment and meagre earnings, the report indicated that terminal operators still bear the burden of most of the challenges at the port. Terminal operators face huge challenges in the area of storage as the terminals are used as “cheap storage warehouse alternatives” by cargo owners.

    It said the current policy provides for a free three-day storage after which a charge of N900 is applied per day and regulated by the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), adding that importers take advantage of the low storage charges offered by the operators to store their imported goods at the terminals as opposed to a site warehousing facilities that charge as much as N60,000 per day.

    The report further stated that before the port reform and concession of 2006, the local port system faced major challenges which made it highly inefficient.

  • Senate, EFCC and Customs play cat and mouse

    Senate, EFCC and Customs play cat and mouse

    THE battle for supremacy and the ethical high ground between the Senate on the one hand and some appointees of the Muhammadu Buhari presidency on the other hand has been fierce, messy and troubling. But despite its troubling signposts, the battle is not what it seems on the surface. It portends something far more sinister and dangerous to the body politic. The senate, much more than the House of Representatives, is less bashful about fighting wars, any war, choosing the battleground no matter how irreverent, daring the public offensively, and playing brinkmanship with provocative adroitness. Nigerians, egged on by vocal commentators and civil society activists, seem to recognise and even conclude that the senate is less than altruistic in the ongoing combat. For now, the government side of the battle is exemplified and amplified by the ineffaceably cocksure Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) chairman, Ibrahim Magu, the sometimes coarse Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) comptroller-general, Hameed Ali, and the gruff and immense Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Babachir David Lawal.

    On the surface, the war is about a pliant senate headed by Bukola Saraki, a senate alleged to be ethically challenged and imposing itself and its controversial moral code on both the presidency and the nation. Dr Saraki himself faces many investigations and court battles, and is assumed to be deploying the senate’s influence to pressure the presidency into soft-pedalling on the cases or sidestepping the investigations, or even stalemating the entire struggle. The particulars of the trouble Dr Saraki faces are doubtless troubling. There is the Code of Conduct Tribunal case in which he is accused of inaccurate declaration of assets; there is also the importation of a bullet proof jeep for his use that is mired in controversial payment of inaccurate duty leading to the seizure of the vehicle; and there is the newer and more damning case of N19bn allegedly siphoned from states’ share of the Paris Club refund and the N3.5bn reportedly traced to the senate president and some of his aides. There is, it seems, no respite for Dr Saraki, as his antagonists appear determined to thrust the knife deeper into his back. He faces an uphill battle convincing the country of his right ethical standing and bona fides.

    Ranged on the other side of the battle are the senate president’s three formidable enemies hamstrung by their own peculiar bureaucratic or ethical challenges. Mr Magu is condemned by the Department of State Service (DSS) as unfit for the post he is seeking confirmation. In an equally damning report which the Service has been reluctant to recant, Mr Magu stands convicted of cavorting in an ethical miasma of his own finding and making. It is obvious the senate wants him removed from his acting EFCC chairmanship because he is not letting up in traducing and harassing the senate’s leadership. Mr Ali drew the senate’s ire by defying the order to appear before them in customs uniform. This was a totally needless controversy that had little or nothing to do with the law or constitution. But it has become a tortuous struggle for dominance. On his own, Mr Lawal is embroiled in a more straightforward case of alleged abuse of office in which a company connected with him reportedly applied for and won a controversial contract meant to palliate the sufferings of internally displaced persons in Boko Haram’s blighted Northeast.

    The three men, together with the disputatious camps they belong to in the fractious Buhari presidency, are bonded by their sworn determination to make the senate either amenable to their wishes and the executive’s or at least unhorse Dr Saraki, their chief tormentor. Both the customs and the EFCC have thus begun a cat and mouse game with the senate. Dr Saraki’s aides, the EFCC threateningly announced, would be hauled in for interrogation over the N19bn illegally deducted from the states’ N522bn Paris Club loan refund, particularly the N3.5bn allegedly traced to the senate president and his aides. In addition to Mr Ali defying the senate over the uniform brouhaha, the Customs have also intensified their propaganda war against the upper legislative chamber by substantiating their allegations of customs duties evasion by the senate. Mr Lawal has been fairly reticent in recent times, but he had twice bad-temperedly defied the senate, sometimes using inflammatory words and declining their invitations to defend his actions.

    In the midst of the long-running battle between the executive and the senate, a battle that has led to paralysis over the confirmation of 27 Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs), the Federal Executive Council (FEC) has wisely constituted a committee to mediate a truce or, more appropriately, seek ways to placate the obviously angry senate. The mediation group is headed by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. Government spokesman, Information and Culture minister, Lai Mohammed, acknowledged that democracy was bound to manifest the kind of struggles the country was witnessing between the executive and the legislature. It is part of the learning curve to find a balance between the powers and responsibilities of all the arms of government, he says. But after waiting until positions ossified so dangerously, it is not clear how the mediation group hopes to engender peace, especially after some government functionaries have joined the fray and spoken exasperatingly of the senate’s leadership style and role in the misunderstanding.

    Hopefully, a peace deal can be brokered. Last year, going by the executive’s desire to win every argument against the senate and the judiciary, and given the injurious manner the sentimental discourse was framed, many observers began to fear that the struggle had become a zero-sum game where one of the parties simply had to lose for the other to win. In fact, at a point, the country came dangerously close to being worked up to overthrow what Nigerians concluded was a decadent and retrogressive National Assembly. There was no attempt to separate the National Assembly’s controversial and unpopular principal officers from the legislature as an institution.

    Worse, and more depressingly, there was no attempt to anticipate how the chain reaction would end once the instigated public marched on the National Assembly. Not only was the executive wholly incapable of framing their arguments and position in the inspiring and lofty terms of the finest principles of democracy, the public also carelessly glossed over the unhidden fact that the presidency was no longer in the hands of the man elected to preside over the affairs of the country. The new jingoistic and usurpatory cabal, part ethnically bigoted and part religiously extremist, was more obsessed with the destructive materialism of power than its utilitarian relevance for democracy, good governance, and unity and stability. Years of experience with instability since 1966, when disaffection with one government did not necessarily lead to a better replacement, had apparently not taught the public the virtue of patience and moderation.

    The Federal Executive Council is right to seek an understanding and settlement with the senate. This is not an indication of weakness, desperation or subservience. It is a manifestation of strength and wisdom, the kinds that have eluded a large section of the public. In a matter of years, the current principal officers of the National Assembly will vacate their seats, and possibly the legislature entirely. But that institution will remain. It is in the interest of democracy and the freedoms the constitution has so elegantly vouchsafed and guaranteed that the legislature must be guarded and helped to retain its relevance and influence, despite the obvious failings of many of its leaders. Members of the cabinet and heads of government agencies and civil society activists who have spoken unguardedly and emotively about the legislature, and are campaigning for its abrogation or occupation, are confused.

    The senate’s principal officers, particularly Dr Saraki, has acted sensibly but purely accidentally in defending the legislature’s powers and influence. Why in the same vein he is unable to grasp the fundamental fact that he fouls the dignity of that hallowed chamber by his unconscionable and unethical private and public moral codes, not to say unending court battles, is hard to explain. Can he make amends? It is doubtful. For as the Nigerian society and democracy are currently structured along obsessively materialistic lines, it is difficult for exemplar politicians, the kind Nigerians crave, to win public office. The country must therefore look beyond Dr Saraki and his coterie of tragicomedian supporters. The legislature must be defended in order for it to serve as a bulwark against the increasing predilection of the Buhari presidency for dictatorship. After the legislature has been secured, then Nigerians must take up the onerous task of filling its hallowed seats with qualified and ethical lawmakers. Enough of the sentimental, reactive and uninformed approach.

    The rapprochement begun by FEC must be encouraged, and the near unschooled defiance of Messrs Magu, Ali and Lawal must not be allowed to take root if Nigerian democracy is not to become malformed and endangered. Indeed, all this trouble could have been averted if the presidency had been both cohesive and visionary, not to say informed, enough to anticipate the dangers and consequences of its increasingly dysfunctional leadership style. However, all is not lost. If the public can summon the patience and reflection required to help rebuild Nigerian democracy, the current abhorrent struggle for supremacy between the senate and a few members of the executive arm could yet become a part of the learning curve that is an integral part of the African experiment with democracy.