Customs & ExciseHeadlinesNews We are Short-Staffed, Customs CG Cries To NASS …why we can’t Secure Nigeria borders Against Smuggling – Ali By maritimemag March 5, 2021 ShareTweet 0 We are Short-Staffed, Customs CG Cries To NASS …why we can’t Secure Nigeria borders Against Smuggling – Ali Tayo AFOLABI The Comptroller General of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) Col. Hameed Ali (rtd), yesterday told the National Assembly that the service is short-staffed. Ali said this at the presentation of the service’s 2021 budget before the House Committee on Customs Service in Abuja. According to him, the service has not done any recruitment in the last 17 years hence making them short-staffed adding that recruitment into the service was the prerogative of the President. He said the NCS needed to recruit officers, adding that there was a gap in terms of officers currently in the service. “There will come a time that there will be no junior officers again in NCS; we need more officers and this is why we embarked on the recruitment of 3,200 officers for which we have so far spent N40 million,” he said. The CGC also said that the porous and extensive border area requiring security coverage was the reason for the spate of smuggling and arms proliferation in the country. Ali, however, said that the procurement of three mobile scanners for it by the Ministry of Finance would further enhance its surveillance and security at the country’s borders. He said that there was no way the NCS, which has a little over 15,000 officers, would be able to police the nation’s borders effectively. The CGC said that it was worrisome that smuggling often happened in border communities where most of the residents had no feel of governance and therefore bare no allegiance to the Nigerian government. He said that those residents would rather bare their allegiance to smugglers because of lack of government presence in the border communities, stressing that the NCS would continue to do its best to police the nation’s borders. “I feel their pain, in some cases, they have to cross the border to go to school and also fetch water because there is no government presence,” the CGC said. He said that the war against smugglers should not be left to the NCS alone, adding that other security agencies should be involved in the fight against smuggling. Ali also disclosed that the three scanners purchased would be deployed to Apapa, Tin can Island and Port Harcourt, adding that the scanner would be used to improve its work. Rep Leke Abejide, the Chairman of the committee, said that the committee was interested in the 2020 NCS budget performance as it was one of the major agencies of revenue generation in the country. © 2021, maritimemag. All rights reserved.
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