Nigeria Customs Service, Gwagwalada, Abuja FCT |
From next month,
importation of vehicles through the land borders will be prohibited, according
to a new prohibition order issued by the Federal Government to that effect. The
prohibition order covers all new and used vehicles.
The
Punch report continues:
A
statement issued on Monday by the Nigeria Customs Service indicated that the
ban was sequel to a presidential directive restricting all vehicle imports to
the seaports with effect from January 1, 2017.
The
restriction on importation of vehicles follows that of rice, whose imports
through the land borders had been banned since April 2016.
In
the statement signed by its spokesperson, Mr. Wale Adeniyi, the NCS advised
importers of vehicles through the land borders to utilize the grace period up
till December 31 to clear their vehicles landed in neighbouring countries’
ports.
The
Federal Government had disclosed at a forum of the automotive industry on
Friday that it would ban the importation of vehicles through land borders and
enforce the presentation of road worthiness certificates on such vehicles from
their countries of origin before allowing them into Nigeria.
The
Director-General, National Automotive Design and Development Council, Mr. Aminu
Jalal, who said this on behalf of the government, added that it was a means of
controlling the influx of used vehicles, popularly called ‘Tokunbo’, into the
country.
Stakeholders
in the automotive industry had earlier called for strict regulation of the
importation of vehicles, noting that poor implementation of the auto policy
introduced in the last quarter of 2013 by former President Goodluck Jonathan
administration was driving down the volume of their products.
The
auto policy prescribed the imposition of 70 percent tariff on imported cars,
both old and new ones.
While importers of new cars are currently paying 70 percent of the cost of the vehicles as import duty, owners/importers of Tokunbo cars pay 35 percent. The government has yet to enforce the implementation of the 35 percent import duty on used cars, which ought to have commenced last year.
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