Clearing agents operating in the nation’s
seaports have cried out over alleged re-introduction of the controversial
benchmark for all imported consignments, saying that the
introduction has hiked cost of clearing goods by 200 per cent. Customs has
however claimed that the new scheme was brought back to enable the Service meet
its revenue target.
National Secretary of the National Council of Managing Directors
of Licensed Customs Agents, NCMDLCA, Uchu Block, who disclosed this to
Vanguard, explained that the re-introduction has driven up the cost of clearing
goods from the ports by over 200 percent.
Block noted that items like
grinded corn for the production of Noodles which costs about N5 million to
clear up unti l last year, now costs about N17 million for the same item and
the same quantity.
The NCMDLCA scribe pointed
out that the situation is affecting clearing process at the port and worse still,
there is no one to complain to. He further noted that even when there is a
channel for complaint, people would not want to come forward as the delay may
cost them more in terms of demurrage.
Responding to the above
however, the Public Relations Officer of Tin-can Island Command of the Nigeria
Customs Service, Chris Osunkwo, said that it is not true that the Service has
re-introduced the contentious benchmark.
Osunkwo told Vanguard that
the Service is only carrying out government directive on the issue and
explained that the current duty rate is based on the international standard set
by the World Customs Organisation, WCO.
In his words, “There is no
iota of truth there but there is a procedure for determining value for any
imported item. No body gets up and determines the value of a product, there are
lay down procedures and standards for determining it.
“If what they call
benchmark is the application of the standards, so be it because valuation
matter is not a Nigeria Customs matter alone. It is a universal thing which was
introduced by the WCO.
“As such we (Customs) must
play by the rules of the game. So these are standards set by the WCO because we
are a member.”
“Does Customs still charge
different duties on similar goods at the various ports across the country, no,
there is uniformity because we receive our directive from government based on
its policy and it is this policy that determines how much the Service will
collect as duty from any import into the country.
“Take for example duty on
imported vehicles, there is a government policy that says collect 35 percent
more on all imported vehicles and there is a government circular from the
ministry of finance to that effect and that is what Customs is implementing.
“We cannot act in
isolation. We cannot just wake up and jack up the value on imports. Some people
criticise out of ignorance,” he noted.
- See more at:
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/06/cost-clearing-goods-ports-200/#sthash.4Hi6MZ0R.dpuf
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