………… “This is simply because there is no presence of governance. In some areas, a border community crosses to other country to get basic amenities,” Nigeria’s Immigration boss

Nigeria’s Senate President, Senator Ahmad Lawan, has tasked the country’s heads of security and paramilitary agencies to do more to checkmate smuggling of petroleum products out of the country.

At the meeting yesterday in Abuja include the Comptroller General of Nigerian Customs Service, Col. Hameed Ali (rtd), Commandant General, Nigerian Civil Defence Corps, Ahmed Abubakar Audi, representative of the Director General of the State Security Service, San Gesto and representative of the Comptroller General of Nigerian Correctional Service, Haliru Ishaka Abdulmumini.

The meeting, which followed closely to one held a day earlier with the finance and petroleum ministers, was to find a way forward on the administration and management of the knotty fuel subsidy in Nigeria.

While acknowledging openly that petroleum products from Nigeria easily find their way out of Nigeria illegally, the Senate President said is disheartening that “we paid subsidy on what is smuggled out,” he said.

He said the meeting with the security chiefs was to look into the ways and means of controlling the smuggling of the petroleum products with a view to minimising the cost of fuel subsidy to Nigeria.

“I know individually, these organisations have been carrying out their responsibilities on this but I think that we are coming into a special moment. Our situation is such that we cannot afford anymore to allow this smuggling business to continue because the cost is very huge and debilitating to our people.

“At a point I will hold a meeting with the National Security Adviser who is supposed to coordinate the entire security apparatus for protecting our borders. I will also hold some engagement with the military especially the Navy because a lot of our products are shipped out to other countries through the water ways.

“At the end of the day what we hope to achieve is to minimise or where possible eliminate the incidents of smuggling of petroleum products that we import into the country for our people.

“The figures of what we consume in the country continue to fluctuate. At one point it was almost 100 million litres per day and surely this is difficult to believe that we consume almost 100 million litres per day within our borders. Certainly, a good percentage of it goes out.

“I believe there is a need for deployment of drones and other technologies that are available these days and probably the office of the National Security Adviser should be able to be in charge of that and make the information and data available to all the agencies that need them.

“I believe at one point, we will need the participation of the NCC being the major Institution in our country in charge of the enhancement of technology, the ICT particularly.

“We have to mobilise our citizens especially those at the borders. That when they see trucks conveying petroleum products to our neibouring countries, they should not only say something, they should say it to those who need to know. And that is to our security agencies.

“What we are trying to do is to reduce the level of smuggling of petroleum products out of Nigeria and that will translate into reducing the bill that we pay as petroleum subsidy.”

Responding, the Comptroller General of the Nigerian Customs Service, Col. Hameed Ali, complained of porous borders and absence of governance at the border communities which made their job difficult.

“Let me say here generally speaking, that we have a porous border. You also know we do not have all those equipments you have made mention of in ensuring the surveillance of our borders.

“And one more critical thing is that, within our border communities, there is no presence of governance. Our border communities completely lack presence of governance.

“Therefore, those of us who are shouldered with the responsibility of ensuring that we gate keep, we find it difficult because the ordinary man in Some border does not see reason why he should be compliant, does not see reason why he should work with the security in Nigeria to protect the border.”

By Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

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