The refusal
of Deposit Money Banks (DMB) to participate in the recently launched e-auction
bidding exercise of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) on Tuesday unsettled its
Comptroller-General, Col. Hameed Alli (rtd), who accused the banks of
sabotaging the service’s effort at collecting revenue for the federation.
He said
that: “I am surprised and I don’t know what to say. This is an economic
sabotage. The money you are going to collect is not coming to Customs, it is
not coming to me as a person, it is going to the federation account that will
be distributed to the three tiers of government. So, you deny that.”
The Customs
boss spoke in an interactive session with the Chief Executive Officers (CEOs)
of 17 banks that honoured his invitation to his office in Abuja.
He expressed
surprised that the same banks that participated in auction exercise when it was
run manually distanced themselves from the ongoing automated auction system,
leaving only Jaiz Bank as the sole participants.
With the
participation of one bank, the process was cumbersome for the bidders, who
concluded that the exercise was skewed to favour Northners and Muslims.
He was
surprised that the same banks that collect duties for the NCS were reluctant to
be part of the e-auction bidding process.
Alli said
that “for us to initiate this process and the banks pull out calls for concern.
One is that we want to get some funds from there. Two, it’s going to ease the process
of what we do, and it will encourage transparency in what we do. And the
essence of what we do is to ensure that there is transparency collected
revenue for the federation.”
The Customs
boss who said the banks took the e-auction exercise aback, however said he was
glad that 17 banks CEOs were in the session to lay bare their minds on the
issue for possible solution.
“I want to
know if there are problem, and what are the problems?” he asked.
He noted
that fraudulent bidders had infiltrated the process by conniving with one
another to circumvent the transparency and integrity of the exercise.
According to
him, whoever cuts corner will be delisted from the system.
So far, he
said he could not readily state how much the service has lost as a result of the
non-participation of the banks in the exercise.
He however
dropped the hint that the bidding process has yielded N25,375,500.00 to the
federal government.
The bank
chiefs however took turn to explain their challenges with the e-auction bidding
which were mostly technical issues.
Zenith Bank
Plc said it was still trying to work on its software to participate in the
exercise.
Guaranty
Trust Bank, said no bank would deliberately sabotage the process. But Citi Bank
noted that the agreement it had with the NCS that elapsed in December 2014 was
yet to be revalidated.
According to
the bank, the gap is that the banks were not involved.
All the
parties resolved that a technical committee that has all their representatives
would meet from time to time to iron out all the technical issues until the
stabilization of e-auction process.
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