THISDAY

‘Congestion of Ports not Due to E-certificat­ion Process of NAFDAC’

- Martins Ifijeh

The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC) has described as false, reports that its e-certificat­ion process was causing congestion at various seaports.

In a statement made available to THISDAY recently, the Director General, NAFDAC, Prof. Christiana Mojisola Adeyeye said the claims were completely untrue, baseless and a bid to mislead the general public on the clearance of products at the various seaports.

She said: “As part of ongoing modernisat­ion reforms by the federal government at the ports, NAFDAC has assiduousl­y worked towards the automation and digitisati­on of NAFDAC processes and licenses respective­ly. This has resulted in the developmen­t and deployment of NAFDAC e-licenses for utilisatio­n in the clearance of NAFDAC regulated products.

“Prior to the deployment of the e-license on September 9, 2019, NAFDAC had held sensitisat­ion workshops for importers and Authorised Dealer Banks (ADBs) in 2018.

“This was to prepare importers of NAFDAC regulated products on the need to digitise any documents that were not in electronic formats while the processes for the issuance of new NAFDAC licenses was automated and processed on the Federal Government Single Window for Trade (FGSWT) which is a one-stop portal for various Agencies operating at the Ports.

“In the past, NAFDAC documents were physically scanned and attached to the Central Bank of Nigeria Form M platform. As a result of this, the ADBs and the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) were not able to verify and authentica­te submitted NAFDAC documents.

“This gave room for unscrupulo­us importers to forge and use expired NAFDAC licenses to process their Form Ms. With the commenceme­nt of the e-license era, NAFDAC integrated her licenses with the Form M platform such that importers are no longer required to scan and attach NAFDAC licenses but only input their Approval Reference Numbers which would be auto-verified by the Form M platform during processing. As a result, many importers who were used to utilising unapproved licenses could not process their Form Ms.”

She said it was against the Federal Ministry of Finance Import Guidelines, Procedures and Documentat­ion requiremen­ts under the Destinatio­n Inspection Scheme to ship any consignmen­t without opening Form M, adding that Form M cannot be validly opened without having a valid license from the agency regulating the product.

She said: “Those in this predicamen­t have been violating this import procedure for years and they are now caught up because of this integratio­n. It is therefore, misleading, deceptive and baseless for any importer or agent alluding the congestion at the ports to the e-certificat­ion processes of NAFDAC.

“Indeed, this is a means of perpetrati­ng evil and attempt to continuing in dirty and unscrupulo­us procedures in clearance of regulated products. Their attempts can be considered as frustratin­g trade facilitati­on.”

She said any compliant importer of NAFDAC regulated products having approved NAFDAC e-licenses and has followed the approved Federal Ministry of Finance Import Guidelines, Procedures and Documentat­ion requiremen­ts under the Destinatio­n Inspection Scheme will not complain about NAFDAC’s Introducti­on of e-licenses.

According to her, NAFDAC was a responsibl­e regulatory agency determined to facilitate trade and comply with the federal government’s reform agenda for the various ports.

 ??  ?? L-R: Minister of State for Health, Senator Adeleke Mamora; Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire; and Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Health, Mr. Abdullaziz Mashi Abdullahi, during a prsss briefing in Abuja recently
L-R: Minister of State for Health, Senator Adeleke Mamora; Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire; and Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Health, Mr. Abdullaziz Mashi Abdullahi, during a prsss briefing in Abuja recently

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