THISDAY

Customs Agents Accuse Terminal Operators, Shipping Firms of Economic Sabotage

- Eromosele Abiodun MARITIME

The Associatio­n of Nigeria Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA) has accused shipping companies and terminal operators of sabotaging the Nigerian economy by charging fees that are unjustifia­ble thereby increasing the cost of doing business at the nation’s ports in favour of other countries.

National President of ANLCA, Olayiwola Shittu stated this when the Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Ms Hadiza Bala Usman paid a courtesy visit to the associatio­n in Lagos.

Shittu said shipping companies and terminal operators have increased charges claiming that the NPA has increased its due.

Some of the charges, he stated, include; shipping due departing charges, facility charge and others.

According to him, “There is also the sea protection levy that is also being charged by the Nigeria Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency (NIMASA). At the end these charges are transferre­d to the consumer, making life unbearable for them.

“Shipping companies and terminal operators are reaping us off charging all manners of fees. They believe Nigeria is big and they can get all the money they want from the country to service other West African region. We have it on good authority that what shipping companies get from Nigeria that they rely on for survival because of the next to nothing charges they get from other countries in Africa.

“Again the demurrage they are charging in Nigeria they don’t have the facility to support it, they are required to have holding bays they don’t have. It does not matter if the fault is theirs or not you are still charged demurrage. Their charge is the cause of the high cost of doing business at the port and this is affecting the Nigerian economy,” the ANLCA boss said.

The associatio­n also urged the NPA to consider illuminati­ng the ports so that cargoes can be cleared at night.

ANLCA also accused the NPA security personnel of aiding touts and beggars at the port while denying their members entrance to the port.

“We were asked to get gate pass and we have complied. Severally, I have had to go to the gate to intervene when the BPA official are harassing our members who have genuine gate passes whereas beggars and touts are allowed to move freely

within and outside the port premises . I want you to take it into considerat­ion and put an end to this anomaly,” he said. In her response, Bala Usman pledged that the NPA would interact more with stakeholde­rs in 2017 “so as to be more in tune with happenings at the various ports.”

She said the NPA has commission­ed a study on port charges in West Africa in a bid to revive activity at the Nigerian ports. To this end, she revealed that the NPA will introduce quarterly stakeholde­rs meetings to know what is on ground at the ports and be better informed on the plight of operators. She said the essence of her visit was to interact directly with critical stakeholde­rs to discuss issues burning on the minds of the stakeholde­rs and to seek collaborat­ions on how to solve some of the challenges.

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