Customs impound over 60,000 ammunition
The
Nigerian Customs Services has seized arms and ammunition imported into
the country from the United States and Europe, on 17 different occasions
at the various points of entry between 2012 and 2016.
This revelation was contained in a
report prepared by the Enforcement, Investigation and Inspection
Department detailing its general anti-smuggling performance for the each
of the four years.
It said the seizures were carried out during the period under review as part of its anti-smuggling activities.
It stated that the anti-smuggling activities covered all the airports, seaports, creeks and border stations nationwide.
In the report, a copy of which was
obtained by our correspondent in Abuja, the service did not provide the
monetary value of the confiscated arms and ammunition.
This is opposed to other confiscated items where their monetary values were provided by the service.
But sources within the agency confided
in our correspondent that over 60,000 rounds of ammunition would have
been confiscated at different entry points into the country within the
last four year.
The report stated that while the service
recorded just one case of seizure of arms and ammunition in 2012, the
figure rose by 700 per cent to eight cases in 2013.
In 2014, according to the report, six
cases of confiscation of imported arms and ammunition were recorded by
the NCS while none was recorded in 2015.
He said the development if left unchecked is capable of affecting the peace and economic development of the nation.
He said, “It is a must for us to curtail
the influx of firearms.
You could recall that the Libyan episode and
Mali episode have now created more serious nature of circulation of arms
in the whole of Africa.
“The influx of arms is what gives
impetus for criminals to operate.
If we are able to block and make sure
that arms is not circulated the way it is, I am sure we will reduce to
minimum the menace.
“Some of the people who are armed
robbers and kidnappers, without arms in their hands, they cannot
confront most of their victims.”
Commenting on the development, the
Public Relations Officer,NCS, Mr. Wale Adeniyi, told our correspondent
during a telephone interview on Saturday that the influx of arms and
ammunition into the country was worrisome.
He explained that despite the fact that
the NCS had limited of scanners, the agency had been performing its
statutory anti smuggling duties subject to the constraint.
Adeniyi who did not provide the amount
of arms and ammunition seized, added that just last week, the service
recorded the seizure of arms in Tin Can Island Port.
Before that, he explained that another
case was the one involving large cache of armunition concealed in
foodstuffs in a border in Oyo state.
He said “It’s a worrisome development
for all well meaning Nigerians because of the direct nexus between arms
smuggling and various criminal acts like insurgency, militancy,
communal crisis, kidnapping and others.
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