Nigeria Customs Service Seals Stallion Group Premises

Fri, Jul 31, 2015
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Business Briefs

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IN a bid to recover more than N23.6 billion allegedly owed the government, the Nigeria Customs Service, NCS, on Tuesday, July 28, sealed the premises of Stallion Group’s Popular Foods and Masco Agro, and Olam. Other companies that are expected to suffer the same fate are Milan Nigeria Limited (Conti-Agro) and Ebony Agro.

The NCS also announced the suspension of Guaranty Trust Bank Plc, Fidelity Bank Plc and Diamond Bank from further collecting Customs duties over their non-compliance with the partnership agreement with the Customs on the matter. Wale Adeniyi, NCS spokesperson, said the Customs authorities took the decision after exploring various avenues to ensure that the debtors paid up yielded no results.

He said, “The affected companies will also no longer be allowed to discharge their imports in any port in Nigeria. The defaulters and their associated companies have been blocked from the Customs imports system where they ought to have their declaration. All these will be done preparatory to instituting full legal proceedings to compel them to pay what they owe Nigeria when the courts are back from recess.”

Adeniyi said the rice milling companies imported in excess of 750,253,003 metric tonnes of the produce in 2014 at preferential duty rates and levy. “They were the beneficiaries of the rice import quota policy, which specified a preferential duty rate of 10 per cent and levy of 20 per cent of their imports. The policy was anchored on the need to fill the national rice sufficiency gap in line with stipulated quotas allotted to the beneficiaries. So, any quantity imported in excess of approved quotas will be subjected to the extant rate of 10 per cent duty and 60 per cent levy.”

Many of the defaulters had earlier been notified of their indebtedness but they did nothing about it. “We wrote the affected importers several letters to notify them of the duty liability at the normal rate if they exceeded their quotas and we also published many notices in national newspapers where their outstanding payments were mentioned and ultimatum given. However, there were lots of interventions and clarifications required to establish firmly our case against the importers. In some cases, some of them claimed they needed to reconcile figures with the ministry of agriculture,” Adeniyi said.

Olam reportedly owes N4,998,125,665.86, having exceeded its authorised allotted import quota by 149,469.51 metric tonnes; the Stallion Group allegedly owes N17,187,245,022.96 for excess 529,517.33 MT beyond the allotted quota.

— Aug 10, 2015 @ 01:00 GMT

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