SHIPS & PORTS - The Controller, Apapa Area Command of Nigeria Customs Service (NCS),
Comptroller Bashir Abubakar, has said that contrary to widely held
notion, contraband goods do not escape Customs officers’ checks at the
port, but are “deliberately released to trap those behind the import”.
Bashir Abubakar. PHOTO CREDIT: SHIPS & PORTS |
Abubakar said this while fielding questions from journalists in Lagos last week.
Often times,
contraband goods are intercepted by operatives of the
Federal Operations Unit and the Customs Strike Force outside the port
environment after they are released from the port.
Buttressing his argument, Abubakar said a 40-feet container of
tramadol seized outside the port last year by operatives of the Federal
Operations Unit after it was released from the Apapa Port, was
deliberately released to arrest and prosecute the owners.
“There are some seizures we made but we are not happy with the
seizure because at the end of the day we end up not arresting the
importer.
“In some cases, we do that intentionally and we do that in
collaboration. For instance, the tramadol seizure, one of the containers
was intercepted by the Federal Operations Unit. We did that to engage
the importers and to have more arrests, which we succeeded very well.
“Sometimes, if we restrict our operation only within the port, we
cannot make much arrests, so we have to escalate our source of
information. .
“In some areas in the service, we have some officers that put in
lackadaisical attitude and negligence in their duty post and that is why
the service introduced three layers of interception: the Federal
Operations Unit, the Strike Force and the Customs police.
“These are the steps the service has taken and you will be surprised
such intervention is yielding a lot of result both in terms of revenue
generation and arrest,” he said.
- Shipsandports
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