Senate begins investigation into Customs Service
The Senate
on Wednesday started comprehensive probe into the activities of the
Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) to block revenue leakages and enhance
generation.
The probe,
launched by the Senate Committee on Customs and Excise, will look into
ways to increase revenue generation capacity of the service.
The
Chairman of the committee, Sen. Hope Uzodimma, during an oversight visit
to the NCS headquarters in Abuja, said the service should generate
enough revenue to fund the nation’s budget.
He
expressed displeasure at a report by the Ministry of Finance, which
indicated that the NCS had generated less than N400 billion so far in
2016.
Uzodinma said the committee might re-enact the law establishing the service for optimal performance.
“We are
looking into the operations of Customs Service; looking at the areas of
revenue generation and possible leakages with a view to finding
solutions.
“We have done detailed work and we have established contacts with all commands under the service.
“All we are interested in is to evolve a robust framework that will help the NCS earn more revenue.
“In order to do that effectively, we are examining its current mode of operations with a view to refining how things are done.
“By the
time we finish looking at the operations of some of the ports, we will
come back and look at how best to amend the existing Act.
“We want to
create a situation where the NCS will be able to fetch the country the
kind of revenue we are looking for from non-oil sector,’’ he said.
Commenting
on the revelation that the service could not access some oil companies
for payment of levies, Uzodinma said that was part of the impediments
that require enabling laws.
“There are some limitations that have not made it possible for the customs service to perform its mandate the way it should.
“Those are
things that we will also look into so as to remove all obstacles to
enable it function effectively,’’ the committee chairman said.
While
interacting with the Comptroller-General of the Service, Col. Hameed Ali (Rtd.), Uzodinma requested that certain documents be submitted to
enhance the committee’s probe.
The committee gave the service till Oct. 28 to submit the documents and answer all the queries posed.
It sought
to know how the seven per cent Negotiable Duty Credit was managed and
how the service handled seized cargoes and overtime cargoes.
The NCS is
expected to render details of how it handles seized cigarette and
alcohol, record of auctioned overtime and seized cargoes.
The
committee also demanded for record of all waivers granted in the last
three years, value of the waivers, detailed record of sugar levy and
other details of revenue accrual.
Uzodinma
expressed displeasure at the inability of the service to collect duty
from oil companies, promising that a legislation to review the law would
be initiated.
In his remark, the Custom CG, Col. Hameed Ali, assured that the service would fully cooperate with the committee.
He directed NCS officials to provide the committee with all the information and documents it required.
