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N30trn Fraud: Senate Probes Customs, Others

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The Senate Committee on Customs, Exercise and Tariff has commenced investigation into the more than  N30 trillion fraud allegedly carried out in the import, export value chain between 2006 and 2017.
The Chairman of the committee, Sen. Hope Uzodinma made this known at an investigative meeting with some of the commercial banks, alleged to be accomplices in the fraud.
The chairman said the committee would do everything possible to ensure that the mandate given to it by the Upper Chamber to recover and block leakages would be carried out to the latter.
“You recall Senate in plenary mandated this committee to investigate and identify areas of revenue leakages in the entire import and export circle.
“The committee  has started investigation. We  took time to enter into the import and export value  chain and we have been able to identify areas of leakages and malpractices.
“This is ranging from unutilised Form Ms, abandoned Form Ms, partially abandoned Form Ms  abandoned assessment of Customs Duties and foreign exchange allocation manipulation.
“We have been able to go into the database of the operating system of Nigeria Customs Service otherwise called ASCODA.
“We identified Form M by Form M, import by import, vessel by vessel, liabilities of importers and commercial banks that are yet to be handled.
‘‘We are talking about monies in regions of over 30 trillion and we have been able to give all these information to the various commercial banks that purchase foreign exchange on behalf of the importers.
“We met with the banks today and asked them to go home and come back  in three weeks to show us evidence of utilization of the forex.
“Failure of which they will be compelled to refund those foreign exchange they bought from Central Bank or Inter Bank to be used for import,’’ he said.
He stressed that the amount of foreign exchange given to commercial banks and importers  by the Federal Government for importation was not  utilised as agreed.
According to him, the fraudulent act has led to scarcity of  foreign exchange in the market, while the foreign exchange  conceded  to importers are  not tied to activities of importation.
He noted that the development was unhealthy, adding that it had led to some Asian countries round tripping and sending monies out of the country without due process.
The chairman lamented that the practice had contributed to high exchange rate  in the country over time.
“I am sure by the time we conclude this investigation and action plan is drawn,  the exchange rate will come down drastically  because only genuine importers will now enjoy government forex  allocation.
“All  commercial  banks in the country  are accomplices in this matter. They are all involved both the ones that are dead and the ones living.

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