The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has warned
exporters and importers of prohibited items to desist from doing so, warning
that the long arm of the law will soon catch up with perpetrators.
The Customs Area Controller (CAC), NCS, Tin Can
Island Port (TCIP), Apapa, Command, Comptroller Yusuf Bashar issued the warning
in Lagos while addressing stakeholders.
The federal government periodically compiles list
of items that cannot be exported or imported into the country. The items which
are reviewed annually are in two categories, namely the Import Prohibition List
(IPL) and the Export Prohibition List (EPL). Their review is based on the
federal government fiscal policies as contained in its annual budget and is
enforced by the Customs High Command.
The enforcement of the IPL and EPL is in line with
the statutory functions of NCS, namely revenue generation, trade facilitation
and anti-smuggling.
However, speaking at a stakeholder
forum, Bashar warned that only semi-treated and fully processed
wood products will be allowed through its command as export, even as he added
that anything short of what the law permits, will be confiscated.
The stakeholders meeting was meant to sensitize the
trading public particularly exporters on the need to ensure that only
exportable wood products are brought in to the port.
The CAC also said that the command had to bring in
officials of the Federal Environment Protection Agency (FEPA) to assist NCS in
explaining and showing to exporters difference between treated and untreated
wood products.
He explained that exports do not attract any duty
even as he pointed out that in the light of falling oil price, the government
is trying to encourage Nigerians to export as much as they can with a view to
repatriating foreign currencies back home.
His words: “It is an incentive to encourage export
because it is assumed that money will come to government based on exportable
products from Nigeria most especially now that Nigeria is having issue with
crude oil. Price per barrel is going down. It is our major foreign exchange
earner so Nigerians must be encouraged to export as much lawful products as
possible.
“At a point, we asked ourselves how we can
encourage exports from our end. We thought that the best way to do that was to
sensitize the people and tell what exports are allowed by law. We took wood
products as the first item amongst exportable products because it attracts a
lot of attention.
The need for the campaign became imperative due to
the seeming confusion emanating from the export of wood products as almost
every container with wood export despite the status, is considered contraband
by the uninformed”.
According to the CAC, we met exporters of wood
products, freight forwarders of wood exporters, our own Customs personnel and
any interested members of the public and let them know the categories of wood
that are lawfully exportable.
He explained that other government agencies that
approved such exports were also invited to tell exporters what is called
processed and semi- processed woods.
The Customs chief argued that the more there is
communication, the higher the compliance level, just as he declared:
“unprocessed wood is banned from export”.
To ensure that the trading public knows the
difference in the categories of wood for export, samples of processed, semi
processed and unprocessed wood products were shown to exporters.
Bashar warned that he would not want to see
unprocessed wood products in his command, even as he explained that he will
ensure that the four policy thrust of NCS management will be implemented to the
letter.
According to him, NCS must facilitate trade as much
as possible so as to make the ports attractive. Ignorance of the law by port
users has been the most challenging task I face since my assumption of duty as
the new CAC.
http://businessnews.com.ng/2016/02/06/ncs-warns-exporters-importers-on-prohibited-items/
No comments:
Post a Comment