POLITICS
Senate gives NPA 4 days for information on 282 missing vessels
The Senate on Thursday, gave the Managing Director, Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Hadiza Usman, four days to explain the whereabouts of over 282 vessels allegedly missing from the sea ports.
Sen. Hope Uzodinma, Chairman, Senate’s Joint Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariff and Marine Transport, gave the ultimatum in Abuja, at an investigative hearing on N30 trillion lost through leakages in Customs and other agencies.
Uzodinma, who expressed displeasure with the managing director for not honouring the committee’s two previous invitations, said the information on the vessels was imperative and must be available within four days.
He threatened that the senate may be compelled to pursue a financial crime case against Usman should he fail to heed the committee’s directive.
“We are looking for these vessels. We have the date of arrival, the ports of discharge and manifest.
“Everything is with us but in information available to us, no money was collected by Customs, the NPA or any other person.
“So you have four days to do your written explanation otherwise, we will consider it a financial crime,’’ he said.
According to Uzodinma, there are also recent missing vessels that we have discovered.
“I mean recent ones that happened under the new management.
“The NPA is the custodian of the vessels; it received the cargoes and the terminal is theirs.
“We want to know under whose authority the cargoes were released, “he said.
The lawmaker said that the committee had also uncovered the activities of a port cabal that had defrauded the nation to the tune of over N30 trillion.
“It is common knowledge that infractions abound in daily transactions at the nation’s ports, commercial banks, shipping companies, terminal owners and operators.
“They connive at ease with officials to defraud the nation of trillions of Naira.
“Preliminary evidence before us suggests that this is the case in all sea ports,’’ he said.
He expressed concern that the leakages and infractions were costing the country huge revenue losses, while also constituting security threat.
The lawmaker, however, expressed optimism that the Senate was determined to tackle the assault on the economy.
He said that in doing so, the committee would be minded by the reality that those who wanted to bleed the nation to death without remorse must be dealt with without reprieve.
“Consequently, all those indicted in this crime will be made to face the full wrath of the law.
“The nature and methodologies of these infractions include abuse of Form M and violation of foreign exchange manual issued by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), incorrect classification, under-valuation and incorrect declaration.
“Others are incorrect origin, error in calculation, temporary importation, exemptions and waivers, foreign exchange manipulations, unit cost analysis on excise, smuggling and illegal removal of cargo from terminals and lack of exit certificate by vessels.
“We shall zero our search light into these areas of infraction and we are certain that our suspicions shall be confirmed.
“Nigeria Customs Service, Nigeria Ports Authority, Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Nigerian Shippers Council(NSC), shipping companies , operators of bonded terminals and importers and exporters have questions to answer,’’ he said.
Uzodinma emphasised that the joint committee would carry out its assignment without fear or favour.
In his remarks, the President of the Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki, decried the indicting reports about the ports.
Saraki said that it was disturbing to hear that trillions of Naira in revenue was lost annually within the import and export value chain as a result of financial leakages caused through various malpractice and infractions within the system.
He said that the Senate would use its oversight functions to expose corruption and ensure that all loopholes and leakages in the revenue system were blocked.
“We are determined to reverse these financial leakages to enable us to get the much-needed resources to fund our children’s education, healthcare and fix the potholes on our roads.
“I urge you not leave any stone unturned to ensure that we incrementally eliminate waste and corruption in the management of our resources,’’ he said.
The president of the senate expressed confidence in the joint committee to carry out a thorough job that would help to sanitise the system.