Maritime Security: Nigerian waters now safer – Peterside
Fri, May 17, 2019 | By publisher
Maritime
DAKUKU Peterside, the director-general of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, NIMASA, has said that piracy and other maritime crimes have reduced drastically in the Nigerian maritime domain, making it safer for investment. Contrary to reports in a section of the media on his responses while defending the Agency’s budget before the Senate Committee on Maritime Transport in Abuja, Dakuku noted that efforts being put in place by the Federal Government to tackle maritime crimes were now yielding results. He added that NIMASA would continue to up its game to ensure Nigerians benefit from the enormous potential in the sector.
He stated: “You are aware of all the measures we are putting in place to take the Nigerian maritime sector where it belongs and when you look at the multifaceted approach of the Federal Executive Council’s approved deep blue project which covers every aspect of maritime security, you will realise that a lot has been done to get us to this stage.”
The DG said the recent rating of the International Maritime Bureau, IMB, stating that the Nigerian waters are now safer had further boosted investors’ confidence in the Nigerian maritime sector locally and globally. He noted that all these had been achieved through collaboration driven by NIMASA, working with other relevant agencies of government.
“Statistics do not lie and so when the IMB came up with the report of our waters being safer, we were not surprised because we know the level of work we have done with the support of the federal government to ensure that the Nigerian Maritime Sector becomes an haven for investors,” he said.
The IMB 2019 first quarter reported stated that the Nigerian maritime domain recorded no vessel hijack in the period under review, first time since the first quarter of 1994 that Nigeria would have such record. The report also said between January and March 2019, Nigeria a decrease in piracy incidents, compared to the same period in 2018.
Peterside also said maritime could fund a large percentage of Nigeria’s budget if properly harnessed. He added that despite increases in the Agency’s contribution to the Consolidated Revenue Fund, CRF, the NIMASA remained committed to doing more, especially through the recently launched final billing system, the automation of all its processes, and other strategies being put in place by the Executive Management team to block leakages.
IMB, a specialised department of the International Chamber of Commerce, recently released its report for the first quarter of 2019 showing an increased level of safety in the Nigerian maritime domain.
Pottengal Mukundan, the IMB director, was also quoted as saying Nigeria was gaining advantage from coordinated responses to incidents via its maritime regulatory agency, NIMASA, and the Nigerian Navy.
– May 17, 2019 @ 15:42 GMT |
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