Nigerian Senate seeks fuel supply to border communities

Edwin Akwueh, Abuja

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Senate has directed the Comptroller General of the Nigeria Customs Service, NCS, and the National Security Adviser, NSA, to lift the subsisting restriction order placed on the supply of petroleum products to border communities, saying that fuel subsidy removal by the federal government has substantially put paid to the smuggling of the products.

Senate is also urging the Offices of the Comptroller General and the NSA to intensify preventive and enforcement measures to combat smuggling of all kinds in the country.

These resolutions followed the consideration of a motion on the need to End the restrictions to supply of petrol to Nigerian border communities. sponsored by Senator Solomon Adeola on Tuesday.

Senator Adeola, while leading debate on the motion, informed his colleagues that the federal government had on November 6, 2019 through the Comptroller General of Customs directed that “no petroleum products is permitted to be discharged in any filling station within a radius of 20 kilometres to the border” of Nigeria.

He noted that the directive was to checkmate smuggling of Nigerian petroleum products, mostly premium motor spirit, PMS, to the neighbouring countries where there was a thriving market for petrol because of subsidy that was still on the product until May 29, 2023 when President Bola Tinubu announced its removal in his inaugural speech.

“This policy had brought untold hardship and major losses to businesses of the residents and indigenes of the affected border communities, which later made the Nigerian Customs to relax the policy slightly by given license to two or three petrol stations in each of the local government areas that borders these neighbouring countries. 

“But that remedy was just a drop of water in an ocean scarcity of petrol considering the mass population of the people affected in these border towns and communities,” he stressed.

The lawmaker said the suspension order has really affected the people living in border communities across Yewaland in Ogun State, particularly in Idiroko axis where he disclosed only five licensed independent petroleum marketers are allowed to dispense the commodity to over 500,000 residents with over 150 dispersed towns and villages.

Senator Adeola argued that Since there is no longer subsidy on our petroleum products as proclaimed by the President, there is no longer justification for the restriction order because the price of petrol across the international border has also gone up in line with the new price regime across Nigeria.”

All the senators who contributed to the motion lamented the “Untold hardships” being faced by the people living in border communities over restrictions on fuel as well as fertilizer, especially in the Northern part of the country.

Thereafter the Senate mandated its Committees on Customs and Excise, and National Security and Intelligence, when constituted, to ensure compliance and report back in four weeks.

 

 

 

PIAK

 

 

 

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