Some
key government ministries, departments and agencies have abandoned
their consignments at the nation’s ports for over 12 months now.
Among the affected
government agencies, according to investigation by our correspondents,
are the Ministry of Health, which has 34 abandoned cargoes at the ports;
and the Central Bank of Nigeria with 20 cargoes.
Others are the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, which has two, and the Delta Steel Company with 22 consignments.
While the CBN
consignment contains currency materials; that of the Health ministry has
equipment meant for hospitals across the federation.
The abandonment of the
consignments, according to findings, is in flagrant disobedience to
repeated warnings issued by the Nigerian Custom Service to the affected
government agencies to clear their cargoes.
Their refusal to clear
the cargoes had, for instance, made the Comptroller-General of Customs,
Alhaji Abdullahi Dikko, to call on the Federal Government to take
punitive measures against the agencies.
Dikko had expressed
regrets that several appeals made by the NCS to the defaulting agencies
had not been honoured, saying the development had increased congestion
at the ports.
But findings by our
correspondents in Abuja indicated that bureaucracy at the nation’s ports
as well as the change in government policy as it related to
standardisation of equipment were major reasons for the abandonment.
The development has led
to the accumulation of huge demurrage and delay in the execution of key
government programmes by the affected MDAs.
The Director, Corporate
Communications Department, CBN, Mr. Mohammed Abdulahi, confirmed that
the apex bank had cargoes containing spiral reinforcement materials for
its projects.
Apart from this, he
noted that some of the cargoes contained currency processing equipment,
adding that officials of the apex bank had begun moves to clear the
consignments.
No comments:
Post a Comment