We’re Worried Over Quality Of Imported Rice – Govs
BY MUSA SIMON REEF, ABUJA – Nigeria’s 36 governors have said they are worried with the quality of imported rice being consumed by Nigerians, saying such imported rice “is substandard and sometimes harmful to the human body”.
In a press statement signed by Head, Media and Public Affairs of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), Abulrazaque Bello-Barkindo, the governors also called on the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) to take measures and arrest the situation.
This, according to the statement, formed part of the communique from the state chief executives’ last meeting which took place in the banquet hall of the Aso Presidential Vila in Abuja.
“The governors said that huge consignment of rice still finding its way into the market was imported into the country since 2014 when the preceding administration issued a very liberal import license regime to its election financiers who were able to bring a substantial quantity of rice into the country using a waiver from the presidency at the time.
“The governors argued that while some bulk of the consignment was stale, others were either rejected in other countries or had overstayed in various warehouses before they found their way into Nigeria through the activities of some unscrupulous elements.
“The governors had summoned the Nigeria Customs Service to shed light on the matter so that a solution to the problem would be found,” the governors said.
The governors, the statement added, also “expressed concern that Nigerians were either falling sick or losing their lives to the consumption of these substandard produce even though some of the states of the country have commenced elaborate efforts to produce rice in commercial quantity with a view to halting the nation’s over-reliance on staples that can be produced locally.
“Most governors of the states that have already embraced the back to land mantra of this administration frowned at the situation where Nigerians snubbed the locally produced commodity in preference for foreign ones which were most of the time, stale, contaminated or even fake.”
In their presentation to the NGF, the Comptroller General of the Nigeria Customs Service, Col Hameed Ali, who was represented by Deputy Comptroller General Dangaladima Aminu, “said that although there is an upsurge in the smuggling of rice through the nations land borders, there has been no alteration to the prohibition on the importation of rice through Nigeria’s land borders and that any quantity of rice which finds its way into Nigeria through land routes was smuggled commodity.
“Dangaladima said that rice was usually smuggled into the country through unauthorized border routes which span more than 4000km and that these smugglers were aided by border communities who alternated between motorcycles, canoes and rafts to smuggle contraband rice into the country,” the statement said.
The NCS Customs boss was quoted to have declared, “Your Excellencies, it may interest you to note that a motorcycle can make up to 30 trips with six 50kg bags of rice per night depending on the distance and when the border communities are not smuggling the produce themselves, they are aiding or providing cover for smugglers.”
However, Dangaladima added that rice merchants had recorded huge losses as a result of seizures by the customs. He disclosed that in 2014 customs seized 12000 metric tons of the commodity, 4503 tons in 2015 and 14000metric tons in 2016.