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Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening - Politics - Nairaland

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Tunji-Ojo Orders Probe Of NIS Officials At Seme Border Over Misconduct / Nigerian Customs To Deploy Drones At Seme Border / Smuggling Booms At Nigeria, Niger Border, Despite Border Closure (2) (3) (4)

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Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Islie: 8:51am On Jun 11, 2022
Anozie Egole


Eighteen months after the Federal Government announced the reopening of the Seme border following a 14-month closure, smuggling is once more thriving there, Saturday PUNCH has learnt.

When the Federal Government announced the closure of the Seme border in August 2019, the intention was to curb the smuggling of goods and weapons.

A tour of the border by our correspondent showed that there was a lull in commercial activities in the community, while smuggling continued to boom.

The once busy J4 and J5 motor parks located at the border community, where commuters board vehicles to different parts of Lagos State, have long been demolished with little or no space left for vehicles again.

A motorcyclist, Mr Orji Ike, who specialises in conveying passengers across the border, said, “The business of smuggling is booming now unlike before. During the border closure, it was moving very slowly as people were being careful not to be caught. Now, people freely go to Cotonou to buy second-hand clothing and come in and nobody disturbs anybody.

“Even if you want to buy cannabis sativa, I will take you across and when you are done, call me I will come and pick you and nobody will disturb you, but that one comes with extra charges”

Corroborating the motorcyclist, a trucker, who gave his name simply as Babafryo, added that smuggling of all types of contraband was booming at the border.

He said, “There is no type of goods that we can’t carry across or bring in here; at worst, we go through the waterside. Many people, especially those crossing with contraband, go through the waterside to avoid disturbance even though there is little or no disturbance on the normal route.

“If you are coming in with large quantities of contraband, we have the type of cars we use to bring such goods in and the time so that nobody will disturb the cars. Though business is still very dull now compared to before the closure, we are very hopeful it will pick up. In case you have any thing that you want us to help you take across to either Seme or to bring to Nigeria, let us know; that is what we do.”

A resident of the area, Blessing Adejo, lamented that there had been a massive drop in activities at the border following the closure and eventual reopening, even as he blamed the Monday sit-at-home by members of the Indigenous People of Biafra in the South-East as the reason the border was dry when our correspondent visited the community on Monday.

“The truth is that since the closure and reopening of the border, activities have been very slow here; you can see how we are just standing with no work. People are not travelling; I believe another reason why the border is so dry today is because of the Monday sit-at-home in the South-East,” Adejo stated.

When queried on why he blamed the sit-at-home as the reason why activities at the border remained low, he said, “We all know that the Igbo travel a lot; they make use of this border more. So, since the sit-at-home started, most of them coming from the South-East cannot come on Mondays, but other days are better.”

A food vendor, Ijeoma Onye, said activities in the area had been paralysed due to the closure and eventual reopening of the border.

Adejo also said a lot of people had relocated out of the area adding, “Some of the people who are doing business in the area have travelled due to low patronage. The area is no longer the way it used to be before the border closure. We are, however, hopeful that business will soon pick up again.”

The Seme chapter Chairman of the Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents, Lasisi Fanu, said it was now more expensive to bring in goods through the border than through the seaports.

He said members of the association spent a minimum of N1.8m to clear a 40-foot container and N1.3m to clear a 20-foot container, adding that the government had stopped informal trade, which was affecting their businesses drastically.

Fanu stated, “There has not been any change since they reopened the border; the border was reopened in 2020 and nothing drastically has changed. The clearing procedure in Cotonou still remains the same; it has been N1.8m for 40-foot and N1.3m for 20-foot containers.

“Before now, we used trucks to load goods from Cotonou directly, so you can combine more than one container in a truck and move it as one, because it was an informal trade then. But before they reopen the border, they said the informal trade must stop and it has stopped. They said the goods must move into Nigeria in the original form, which is containerised, and it must be received by the Nigeria Customs Service before you can think of opening the container.”

He also said that most of the trucks with goods going to Cotonou were under the Economic Community of West African Trade Liberalisation Scheme.

Fanu added, “So with that in Nigeria now, we work with the Pre-Arrival Assessment Report. Though we worked with the PAAR before, we paid in bulk as informal trade, but now, you open PAAR with the container number and you pay the same amount and still pay in Lagos and Port Harcourt.

“So, that extra amount we pay in Cotonou stands to be something extraordinary, because it is not applicable for people that import through Lagos. If, for instance, you spend N2.5m as the landing cost from Cotonou, Lagos will spend N1.5m because of the extra cost of clearing in the Cotonou port.”

Fanu said life in the border community had been tough since the reopening because the government had failed to show its presence in the community.

He advised the government to establish a truck park at the border, adding that the facility would generate revenue for the government.

Fanu added, “Life has been tough here since the reopening of the border. If the government of Nigeria can provide some services at the border post like trailer parks, they will be generating revenue for the government. But the government doesn’t want to do that; how do you think people living in the border community will survive? They will have to involve themselves in one illegal trade or the other.

“So, life here is very tough because the government has failed to show its presence in the community. We have been asking to be given facilities, but they have refused. Seme border happens to be the only industry in this area, likewise Idiroko and Owode. Since the reopening, nothing has been given to the border community.”

Also speaking, the Seme border Chairman of the National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders, Ekene Onyeebuchi, said, “There is not much change at the border; presently we don’t have enough work here as business no longer come. Imported goods are very scanty here; once in a while you will see one or two containers. Before the closure, business was booming, but now, to clear goods here is more expensive because the government of Benin Republic has added some charges to what we pay.

“They now take a high transit charge; we spend CFA1.4m in Cotonou, which is almost the same thing with the naira and you need to carry it by truck to the border where you will spend almost CFA500,000. And they have a container deposit of about CFA3m. So, these are some of the challenges and the government will take some percentage out as tax.”

Speaking on the issue of smuggling, the Customs Public Relations Officer in charge of the command, Husseni Abdullahi, said, “There is no country in the world where there is no smuggling, the countries only fight to reduce it to the barest minimum.

“There is no country in the world where smuggling has been stopped completely; we only try to suppress smuggling to the barest minimum and to the best of our ability. I know that officers and men of my command are doing their best to ensure that we suppress smuggling to the barest minimum.”

He said the commonest products smuggled through the route were petroleum products and so far, the command had seized over 300,000 litres

Abdullahi stated, “And to tell you the fact that we are doing that, the common smuggling activity in this terrain is smuggling of petroleum products and as far as I am concerned, the command is doing wonderfully well on that aspect. I can tell you that between January and now, we have over 327,000 litres of petroleum products seized by the officers.

“We are still on that even as I am talking to you, we still have seizures of petroleum products. We have measures to suppress smuggling in this axis aside from the Customs Area Controller patrol team, we have other patrol teams; we have the anti-bunkering unit that has to do with that one.

“And to God be the glory, we are achieving success in that regard. You will never see second-hand clothing in our domain because we don’t allow that; we have two approved checkpoints by the government.”

https://punchng.com/smuggling-booms-at-seme-border-18-months-after-reopening/

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by AzuNas: 9:25am On Jun 11, 2022
Alright. . . . . . . Aje

Na all d borders,Seme,Illela,Koko all na for smuggling.

Visa on arrival come make am cast.


Abeg

13 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by younglleo: 9:25am On Jun 11, 2022
grin

2 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by FlyingKing: 9:25am On Jun 11, 2022
Normal things

1 Like

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by IamWonderful: 9:25am On Jun 11, 2022
ok
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by dvan(m): 9:25am On Jun 11, 2022
If Journalists know of these breaches, then the custom men are guilty of sabotage. Journalist Intel cannot supercede that of trained agents with unmatched privileges.

29 Likes 1 Share

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Hambivert: 9:25am On Jun 11, 2022
Border was shut down to shut down smuggling.
Border opens up smuggling booms.
Then why the heck was it shut down if adequate measures would not be put in place to curb it?

The shut down was a strategy to enrich some persons later resulting in the spike of inflation we experience now.
I don't think it was a miscalculation by this administration, but a sparogative intentional act to increase the level of their wickedness like most of their policies have always been.

92 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by kansyn(m): 9:25am On Jun 11, 2022
Ok
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by harzard100(m): 9:25am On Jun 11, 2022
.
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Lastmankc(m): 9:26am On Jun 11, 2022
I am sure they will be smuggling human parts,drugs and even human beings.You have to be wary of things going on in these borders.

1 Like

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Keepamsafe: 9:26am On Jun 11, 2022
C
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by dadavivo: 9:27am On Jun 11, 2022
Meanwhile all Northern borders are used for importing terrorist, weapons (grenades and RPG) suicide bombers from Niger and Chad.

But they want us to be worried about people bringing in Rice, vegetable oil and cloths.

Bastardds

61 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by bigdammyj: 9:27am On Jun 11, 2022
Noted.
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Triangles1(m): 9:27am On Jun 11, 2022
Just like the way China's phone flooded Africa market, the question is can you afford the price of original one, the cars, rice, cloth, turkey, oils you bought across border are more cheaper than the one here, until our government reduce the price of the one they want us to buy.

3 Likes

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Searchingvictor: 9:28am On Jun 11, 2022
Mr money.

Make person reason me 500k wey he no dey use for now. make I help you save am, so that you won't waste it.
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Worldlegend(m): 9:28am On Jun 11, 2022
Like for Peter Obi

Skip this if you don't care about Nigeria's future

26 Likes

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by ojasweb(m): 9:28am On Jun 11, 2022
The number of checkpoints between roundabouts and Seme is outrageous, yet smuggling is booming?
I am even tired of driving along that route due to the stress of stopping every 30 seconds.

22 Likes

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by KarlWhyte(m): 9:28am On Jun 11, 2022
.. Ok

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Mumusaphire: 9:29am On Jun 11, 2022
Price will soon drop

9 Likes

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Pootle: 9:29am On Jun 11, 2022
things cant cant jus work properly in this country

1 Like

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by kollinz1234(m): 9:29am On Jun 11, 2022
What is stopping Nigeria from building a wall to protect it's border??

China is over 50 times the size of Nigeria yet they have the great Wall of China


We are deceiving ourselves in this country

5 Likes

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Beremx(f): 9:29am On Jun 11, 2022
If will only bring down the price of rice, then I support 100%

13 Likes

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by F4ku: 9:29am On Jun 11, 2022
. The truth is that since the closure and reopening of the border, activities have been very slow here; you can see how we are just standing with no work. People are not travelling; I believe another reason why the border is so dry today is because of the Monday sit-at-home in the South-East,” Adejo stated.

When queried on why he blamed the sit-at-home as the reason why activities at the border remained low, he said, “We all know that the Igbo travel a lot; they make use of this border more. So, since the sit-at-home started, most of them coming from the South-East cannot come on Mondays, but other days are better.”






Hmmm.. undecided undecided undecided undecided
I no understand oo..

2 Likes

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by 9jayes: 9:30am On Jun 11, 2022
Nice one, my load of rice must enta freely
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by yourshopkwikguy(m): 9:30am On Jun 11, 2022
Smuggling will be very hard to stop in that route for real grin
Both contonou and Nigerian people are very corrupt it's just that the corruption rate pass one another. grin

1 Like

Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Tecnophone: 9:30am On Jun 11, 2022
Northern sponsored news
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by MorataFC: 9:31am On Jun 11, 2022
Ok
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by SegunBABA007(m): 9:33am On Jun 11, 2022
9 Greatest BANK ROBBERY in Nigeria that surprised the world.







https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nk5BeyCC3IU
Re: Smuggling Booms At Seme Border 18 Months After Reopening by Omoluabi16(m): 9:33am On Jun 11, 2022
I once lived around that axis. Occasionally you'll be hearing gunshots early 'momo'. That border na smugglers Haven.

2 Likes

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