The
Nigeria Customs Service on Thursday said it recorded its highest-ever monthly
revenue collection of N100.1bn in May this year.
The
Comptroller-General of Customs, Hameed Ali, confirmed this at the graduation of
Senior Division Course One participants held in Abuja.
Forty
senior officers of the NCS graduated from the Nigeria Customs Commands and
Staff College.
The
event was attended by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo; Chief of Army Staff, Tukur
Buratai; Chief of Air Staff, Sadiq Abubakar; Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi
Adeosun, and other top officials of the government.
The
Customs CG said the feat recorded in the area of revenue generation was as a
result of the reforms embarked upon by the management of the NCS under his
leadership.
He
stated that with the blockage of leakages in revenue, the service was ready to
generate more revenue for the Federal Government.
Ali
said, “Last month, May 2018, was the month we realised our highest collection
in terms of monthly revenue. As it
stands today, we collected a total of N100.1bn.
“We
do hope that this feat will continue and we are hoping that the inflow of
imports will continue and the blockage of the leakages will continue at the
rate we have. Then we will see an
increase in revenue.”
As
a result of the feat recorded in revenue generation, the Customs boss called on
the Federal Government to look into the salary structure of the service.
He
noted that currently, officers and men of the Customs were the least paid out
of all the members of staff of revenue-generating agencies in the country.
The
CG said for the officers and men of the service to be motivated to perform
their duties effectively, there was a need to have a better incentive system
that would be commensurate with what was obtainable in other revenue-generating
agencies in the country.
Ali
stated, “To whom much is given, much is expected; the Nigerian Customs today is
the least paid among its peers of revenue-generating organisations.
“With
this monumental increase in what we are collecting for the government, I,
therefore, plead that we should be considered with our peers in the service. I
believe that if we do this, it will help in forgetting corruption in the
service.”
He
also called on the board of the Customs to consider legislation that would make
it possible for the college to be self-funded rather than wait for budgetary
provisions from the NCS.
Ali
challenged the graduates to bring the knowledge they acquired at the college to
bear to assist in taking the service to greater heights.

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