Business
240 Customs Officers Risk Job Loss … Area Controller Dismantles Seme Checkpoints
About 240 officers of the
Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) may be dismissed following suspected forgery of higher educational certificates.
The Tide source reports that the Comptroller General of NCS, Col. Hamid Alli (rtd) made the announcement last week in a chat with men and officers of the command.
He said that some of the affected officers would be placed back to their deserving ranks, while those who merited it would remain in their present position.
The Tide source gathered that the affected officers obtained the certificates in order to benefit from a recent promotion interview in the system.
The source said the bubble was burst open during a verification exercise conducted for men and officers of the agency as to determine among other things, whether they were due for promotion or not.
It further revealed that upto 4,000 officers were penciled for demotion, but that the affected 240 officers submitted fake university and polytechnics certificates.
The officers as The Tide was told, joined the service with West African School Certificate and have not up- graded it till date.
But the public relations officer of the Command, Mr Christain Osunikwu, has said that the services standing rule do not permit those with WAEC to rise above the rank of customs inspector.
He regretted that men and officers of Nigeria Customs Service could think of being “sharp” even with the knowledge of some laid down rules and regulations of the command.
Meanwhile, the Area Controller in charge of Seme Border Command, Mr Victor Dimka, has dismantled customs check points along the border route to Lagos State.
He said only the two approved ones at Gbaji and Agbara would be allowed to stand.
Dimka reasoned that the dismantled check points had become a known embarrassment to Nigeria saying foreigners regret using it, hence the dissolution.
Business
Kenyan Runners Dominate Berlin Marathons
Kenya made it a clean sweep at the Berlin Marathon with Sabastian Sawe winning the men’s race and Rosemary Wanjiru triumphing in the women’s.
Sawe finished in two hours, two minutes and 16 seconds to make it three wins in his first three marathons.
The 30-year-old, who was victorious at this year’s London Marathon, set a sizzling pace as he left the field behind and ran much of the race surrounded only by his pacesetters.
Japan’s Akasaki Akira came second after a powerful latter half of the race, finishing almost four minutes behind Sawe, while Ethiopia’s Chimdessa Debele followed in third.
“I did my best and I am happy for this performance,” said Sawe.
“I am so happy for this year. I felt well but you cannot change the weather. Next year will be better.”
Sawe had Kelvin Kiptum’s 2023 world record of 2:00:35 in his sights when he reached halfway in 1:00:12, but faded towards the end.
In the women’s race, Wanjiru sped away from the lead pack after 25 kilometers before finishing in 2:21:05.
Ethiopia’s Dera Dida followed three seconds behind Wanjiru, with Azmera Gebru, also of Ethiopia, coming third in 2:21:29.
Wanjiru’s time was 12 minutes slower than compatriot Ruth Chepng’etich’s world record of 2:09:56, which she set in Chicago in 2024.
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