Senate President, Bukola Saraki has told the Col Hameed Ali. the Comptroller General of Nigeria Customs Service that the Senate will allow him to appear in Jeans and Trousers before them if he succeeds in ending smuggling in Nigeria.
“To the Comptroller General of Customs, let me say on a lighter note, that once you end smuggling, even if you want to wear jeans and T-Shirt, I will move the motion that you should wear jeans and T-Shirt,” said Mr. Saraki. “But on a serious note, this issue is very important. Let us all work towards ending this menace once and for all,” the senate president jokingly told the Customs boss on the Senate floor Monday.
The Senate President made the remark at the public hearing on tackling smuggling by the Senate Committee on Customs, Excise, and Tariffs at the National Assembly, Abuja.
Saraki at the hearing said that smuggling constitutes the “greatest threat” to the economic diversification drive of the Buhari administration.
He said, “The singular greatest threat to the delivery of the promises made by President Muhammadu Buhari on the diversification of the economy is this issue of smuggling.”
“The level of smuggling that we are seeing cannot continue because they will definitely rubbish all the policies of government if allowed to go on. I am saying that with all sincerity and all level of responsibility and I tell you why.
“Today, the greatest threat to small holder farmers is smuggling. Today, rice farmers who have gone to take loans either from the CBN (Central Bank of Nigeria) or from commercial banks are being threatened by rice coming in from across the borders at highly subsidised rate.”
“The meaning of that is that the imported rice will always be cheaper than those produced by our local farmers. A time will come, if we do not do anything, that these farmers will not be able to pay their loans to the banks and this will result in serious crisis. The banks that have given loans to these farmers, will also have crisis in their hands. And for the Central Banks that has intervened with billions of Naira again will not be able to recoup their money,’ he concluded.
Senator Hope Uzodinma, the Chairman Senate Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariffs, in his opening remarks said that the public hearing was part of the committee’s holistic investigation into the operations of the Comprehensive Import Supervision Scheme, CISS with a view to identifying the factors responsible for increasing the rate of smuggling of goods into the country.

