The Assistant Comptroller General (ACG) in charge of modernisation of Nigerian Customs Service (NCS), Saidu Galadima, has accused rich Nigerians, including those working in government agencies, of patronising smuggled cars.
Mr Galadima said this during an interactive session with the House of Representatives Committee on Customs and Excise Duty on Tuesday in Abuja.
Mr Galadima informed the lawmakers:
Unfortunately, the big men today in Nigeria, I didn’t say National Assembly members, all their escort Hilux are smuggled vehicles.
He said any officer caught allowing such practice is penalised and punished by the service.
Earlier, the chairman of the committee, Leke Abejide, disclosed that they were working towards repealing some provisions in the Customs and Excise Management Act to reduce the cumbersome process of transferring containers in the agency.
He told the customs delegates the committee was proposing three stages for the transfer of containers, namely, Controller, DC revenue and Exit.
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Mr Abejide said:
One of the reasons we are doing this interactive session is because we are already working on the Customs and Excise Management Act.
We want to have an agreement with Customs on common ground, like all these transfer processes, it is going to be there.
But we don’t want to do it alone; we want to do it with them. We should receive it from this committee by this week.
So when the Act comes, we are going to sit down and look at it and see how we can help them. We are working on the Act.
He stated that customs were short of manpower, and stressed that when the committee went out to the command, the complaints were that they were short of men.
According to him, customs was supposed to be 30,000 men, but they are 15,000. He said the service cannot recruit the remaining 50 percent unless they have money.
The lawmaker said:
Customs is underfunded. They are taking seven per cent of duty on items. This cannot help Customs to recruit. This is one of the things we are doing.