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Home International Customs Nigeria

Nigerian Customs chief ensures duty benchmark on used vehicles

byghadia
25/11/2015
in Nigeria
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ABUJA: 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.

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

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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 is Licensed Customs Agents. Who today, are the key to his achieving the zero tolerance for corruption. It takes two to tangle.

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