Nigeria loses more than N130bn in 3 months to corruption at porous land borders — Association
Nigeria loses more than N130bn in 3 months to corruption at porous land borders — Association
Mr Ken Ukaoha, the President, National Association of Nigerian Traders (NANTS), made this known in Abuja on Wednesday.
According
to Ukaoha, Nigerians can only imagine the gravity of the situation when
similar practices happening at the airports and seaports are taken into
consideration.
“These past three months
alone, Nigeria has lost more than N130 billion due to the porosity of
our borders and the corrupt practices going along the border routes.
“This is for land borders only.
“We have not added the goings on at the airports and we have not added the ones at the seaports.
“And these are selected land borders.
“So you will know the gravity of the situation if you add up everything.’’
Ukaoha
called on the Federal Government to address the corrupt practices on
the country’s trade routes especially in view of the fact that
cross-border trade is key to economic recovery, revenue generation and
growth.
“The unnecessary trade barriers
created by non-transparent, burdensome rules and procedures in turn
constitute vulnerabilities and breed corrupt behaviours,’’ he said.
The president of the association stated
that unnecessary delays in the movement of goods have continued to
increase operators’ and consumer’s losses as well as reduce the revenue
that should accrue to the government.
He added that the unnecessary delays in the movement of goods had further increased the cost of doing business.
He
said sharp practices such as over-invoicing, false declaration of
goods, illegal importation, smuggling, trafficking either in human or
small arms, as well as drug peddling were being perpetuated on the trade
routes on a daily basis.
Ukaoha stated that
the association is working closely with the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) toward tackling the corruption that goes on at
border routes.
He said the ECOWAS Trade Liberalisation Scheme (ETLS) would be used to promote trade and economic integration in the region.
The
scheme was set up in 1979 as one of the first and immediate instruments
of ECOWAS to galvanise the realisation of development objectives of the
region.
Ukaoha stressed the need for awareness
campaign involving all trade-related committees and clerks to deepen
understanding of the scheme and other related regimes.
He also called on ECOWAS to set up a dedicated portal for the scheme to ease access to information.
Ukaoha
further called for the relocation of the National Approval Committee
(NAC) of ETLS to the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment
from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Meanwhile, in the video below, Nigerian women in Katsina state led a protest in support of President Buhari.

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