Comptroller General of Nigeria Customs Service, Mr Hameed Ali, has declared the agency collected N9.2 billion in one day as a result of the ongoing partial border closure exercise by Federal Government.
Ali, answering questions from members of Joint National Assembly Committee on Finance in Abuja, said the agency maintains an average revenue collection of N5billion to N6billion on a daily basis.
The customs boss was at National Assembly on the invitation of National Assembly joint committee on Finance presently considering the 2020 – 2022 Medium Term Expenditure Framework and Fiscal Strategy Paper (MTEF/FSP) submitted to both chambers by President Muhammadu Buhari last week.
He said that most cargoes that used to berth in Benin Republic and later smuggle their goods into the country are now using Nigerian ports.
He said the agency’s revenue has not dropped but rather increased as the a result of the closure.
Ali said: “When we closed the border my fear was that our revenue was going to drop. To be honest our revenue kept increasing.
“There was a day in September that we collected N9.2 billion in one day. It has never happened before.
“This is after the closure of the border and since then, we have maintained an average of about N4.7 billion to N5.8 billion on a daily basis which is far more than we used to collect.
“What we have discovered is that most of those cargoes that used to go to Benin (Republic), shipped to Benin, continue and then discharged and smuggled into Nigeria, now that we have closed the border they are forced to bring their goods to either Apapa or Tin Can Island and we collect duty on them.
“If that would continue, it is a welcome situation. As a matter of fact to answer your question, our revenue has not reduced. It is increasing as a result of closing the border.”
Ali also said that there has been a significant reduction in the amount of fuel supposedly consumed daily in Nigeria since the exercise began.
“About 10.2 million litres of fuel has now been cut down from what we have been assuming to have been consuming. This 10.2 million litres of fuel is always going across the border.
“The issue here is that there is incentive because there is price differential. And that is why our people keep pushing this fuel. If you go to Ilaro today, the filling stations that are there…in Idiroko, there are over 50 to 60 filling stations in one place and they are close to the border.
“And what we have discovered is that they bring in fuel in the afternoon and in the night they siphon it. They do that everyday and this is why we keep saying we are consuming so many litres of fuel everyday.”
The Nation