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Thursday 13 June 2019

Nigeria To Open Land Border For Vehicle Imports By June 20

Nigeria plans to open its land border for the importations of vehicles after it has successfully achieved new initiatives agreement with its key neighbours on incoming cargoes.
The new measure could take off by June 20, this year.
According to the Nigerian Customs Service, a bilateral electronic connectivity programme agreed with the Customs Service of the Republic of Benin.
The bilateral electronic connectivity would ensure automate and network capturing of all electronic information about incoming cargoes through the land border.
The government had in January 2017 ordered a ban on importation of vehicles through the land borders.
The restriction on the importation of vehicles followed that of rice, whose imports through the land borders had been banned since April 2016.
The Comptroller General, NCS, Col Hameed Ali said the decision of the government to shut down importation of vehicles through the border was because the government did not have a reliable system that would assist in controlling importation.
“Vehicles were formerly being imported through the Seme border, but suddenly it was banned because the pressure of enforcement of anti-smuggling for vehicles and claiming of lives and revenue were becoming too alarming, so the government had to restrict the importation through Nigerian ports.
“When vehicles came through the land border, we did not have a record of how the imported cars came here and fake documentation became a common phenomenon. The ban was just a control measure against the practice.”
“By the time we successfully deploy this reliable, transparent and predictable programme that would assist government agencies, not only Customs, to control and regulate the importation of vehicles, the government may decide to relax such restrictions.”
Ali said the establishment of the automated platform and bilateral connectivity meant that any truck that left the Republic of Benin, the information would already be remotely sent in English to Nigeria Customs Service system.
He also gave the assurance that illegal checkpoints mounted by Customs officers and other security agencies along the border corridors would disappear automatically.
“The roads also have to be fixed, because we cannot automate clearing of goods between the Customs and at the end, the stakeholders would be complaining,” he pointed out.

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