Senate asks Customs to suspend policy on vehicle verification

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The Senate has directed the Nigeria Customs Service to suspend proposed policy on selected zonal offices for verification and payment of duties on vehicles.

The Senate also directed the Comptroller-General of the service, Col. Hameed Ali (retd), to appear before its Committee on Customs and Excise to explain essence of the circular he passed regarding the policy to the Nigerian public.

This followed an observation by Deputy Leader of the Senate, Bala Ibn Na’Allah, at plenary on Tuesday.

He cited Orders 42, 43 and 52 of the Senate Standing Orders, 2011 (as amended) and requested that the matter be attended to as urgent as possible.

 

 

According to Na’Allah, the customs boss recently passed a circular, informing Nigerians of the policy.

He said the circular required vehicle dealers and owners to go to nearest Customs office to check if they paid correct customs duties and if not, to update payment or be punished as illegal smugglers.

He added that it was expedient that the Upper Chamber treated the issue as a matter of priority, adding that implementation of the proposed policy was scheduled for April 12.

The lawmaker said that in line with the circular, four zonal offices of Customs had been created for affected dealers or vehicle owners to go and carry out the proposed verification.

 

 

He cautioned that allowing such policy would impose more hardship on Nigerians.

Contributing, Sen. Dino Melaye, said that the policy was unacceptable.

“What the Nigerian Customs has done by this announcement is pure advertisement of incapacitation and incompetence.

“An innocent Nigerian who went to Kano or Kubwa, approached a dealer and bought a vehicle five to seven years ago will now be stopped for stop-and-search by Customs.

“This means that on a day he is rushing his son to the hospital, they will ask him if he has paid correct duty for the car he bought from a dealer.

“ He was not the one that cleared this vehicle. He is not the one that imported this vehicle,’’ he said.

The Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, said that inasmuch as customs would be encouraged to generate revenue for government, it should not be done at the expense of common sense and legality.

“Let me also say that we share the concerns of the customs boss on raising revenue to run our country but unfortunately, it cannot be at the expense of common sense and legality.

In his remarks, President of the Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki, said that the Senate must carry out oversight on agencies of government to ensure that they complied with provisions of law. (NAN)

CJM/NNL/OPI/OPI

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