Connect with us

Blue Economy

NCS Partners WCO for Integrity Audit as Corruption Loopholes Come Under Scrutiny

Published

on

NCS Partners WCO for Integrity Audit as Corruption Loopholes Come Under Scrutiny

By Emetena Ikuku, Waterways News Correspondent

The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) is set to undergo a comprehensive integrity risk audit in 2026, targeting entrenched loopholes across its operations under a strengthened collaboration with the World Customs Organization (WCO).

The audit — described by insiders as one of the most far-reaching assessments of the Service in recent memory — will probe systemic vulnerabilities in revenue collection, border management, and trade facilitation platforms that have long been criticised for opacity and leakages.

Advertisement

The initiative signals a decisive shift from rhetoric to measurable accountability. It follows high-level strategy talks in Brussels, where Comptroller-General Adewale Adeniyi — who also chairs the WCO Council — led engagements that underscored Nigeria’s growing influence in international Customs governance.

In a statement issued on Friday, the NCS National Public Relations Officer, Abdullahi Maiwada, said the Brussels session brought together international experts under the WCO’s Anti-Corruption and Integrity Promotion (A-CIP) Programme to assess reform progress and chart the next phase of action.

Central to the agenda was a blueprint for a comprehensive integrity risk assessment designed to close what officials candidly acknowledge as “systemic leakages” — particularly as Customs processes become more automated and digitally driven.

The rapid expansion of technology in Customs operations has been identified as both an opportunity and a risk. Under the WCO programme’s next phase, running from 2026 to 2030, the focus will be on embedding anti-corruption safeguards directly into digital platforms, ensuring that automation does not simply accelerate inefficiencies or open new blind spots.

Advertisement

One notable step already taken by the NCS is its approval to publish the results of its integrity survey — a move the WCO team described as demonstrating strong institutional commitment to accountability, and one that stands out in a sector not known for voluntary transparency.

See also  Port Modernisation Extends Beyond Lagos, Oyetola Insists as FG Eyes New Deep Seaports in Four States

Officials also point to other early reform gains: tighter valuation controls, expanded post-clearance audits, and the rollout of a voluntary disclosure framework under the Nigeria Customs Service Act 2023.

But the forthcoming audit makes clear that deeper structural issues remain to be addressed.

Adeniyi, responding to the Brussels briefing, affirmed that the WCO partnership is central to rebuilding trust and credibility in the Service. Both sides agreed that integrity has become a defining test for Customs administrations globally, particularly as the volume and complexity of international trade continues to grow.

Advertisement

Next steps include the publication of survey findings, the formation of a dedicated reform task force, and the mainstreaming of anti-corruption measures into day-to-day operations.

For Nigeria’s maritime and trade community — including port operators, freight forwarders, and waterway stakeholders who interact daily with Customs processes — the outcome of the audit carries significant weight. It could validate the reforms underway, or expose uncomfortable truths about how revenue collection and enforcement have been managed at the nation’s ports and borders.

Either way, the results are expected to shape public confidence and Nigeria’s standing in the global trade order.


Waterways News | www.waterwaysnews.ng

Advertisement
Facebook Comments Box
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Blue Economy

NIMASA Receives Over 60 CVFF Applications, Vows Open and Accountable Disbursement

Published

on

NIMASA Receives Over 60 CVFF Applications, Vows Open and Accountable Disbursement

By Okeoghene Onoriobe | Waterways News Correspondent | Lagos

The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) has disclosed that it has received more than 60 applications for the Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF), a development that signals fresh momentum in the push to strengthen indigenous participation in Nigeria’s shipping sector.

The agency equally assured stakeholders that the disbursement of the fund would be handled transparently, with strict accountability measures guiding every step of the process.

Advertisement

The disclosure came on Thursday in Lagos, during the signing of the 2026 Performance Bond between NIMASA’s Director-General, Dr. Dayo Mobereola, and the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Dr. Adegboyega Oyetola.

At the event, Minister Oyetola left no room for ambiguity, issuing a pointed directive to heads of agencies under his ministry to focus on results and shun complacency.

“Let me emphasise that all Departments and Agencies under the Ministry must remain firmly focused on delivering tangible results,” the Minister stated.

He further stressed that the performance bonds carry real weight, describing them as binding commitments subject to close monitoring and rigorous evaluation — not documents to be signed and shelved.

Advertisement

“These are not ceremonial documents. They are binding commitments. Accountability will not be optional,” Oyetola declared.

Speaking after the signing, Director-General Mobereola said the reforms being pursued at NIMASA are deliberate and are being driven with strong backing from the Ministry, adding that the agency remains firmly aligned with the Federal Government’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

On maritime security, Mobereola highlighted a landmark achievement: Nigeria has recorded zero piracy incidents in its territorial waters over the past four years. He attributed this record to enhanced surveillance systems and improved collaboration among security agencies.

The NIMASA chief also announced that the agency is close to completing the automation of its ship registry processes — a reform expected to eliminate administrative delays, speed up turnaround times, and sharpen Nigeria’s competitiveness in the global maritime industry.

Additionally, Mobereola noted that Nigeria has deposited three maritime conventions with the International Maritime Organization (IMO), with three more pending Federal Executive Council approval. He also highlighted Nigeria’s re-election into Category C of the IMO Council in November 2025 as a milestone that restores the country’s standing in global maritime governance and reinforces its leadership role on the African continent.

Advertisement

Waterways News | www.waterwaysnews.ng

Facebook Comments Box
Continue Reading

Blue Economy

Oyetola Orders NSC Probe into Alleged Plot to Squeeze Out Local Barge Operators 

Published

on

Oyetola Orders NSC Probe into Alleged Plot to Squeeze Out Local Barge Operators 

Minister vows zero tolerance for anti-competitive behaviour as indigenous operators cry foul over foreign interference at Nigerian seaports

By Oghenewoke Onoriode|Waterways News Correspondent, LAGOS

The Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Dr Adegboyega Oyetola, has ordered the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) to investigate allegations that a coordinated effort is underway to push indigenous barge operators out of Nigeria’s seaport logistics chain.

Advertisement

The directive came during the 2026 First Quarter Citizens/Stakeholders’ Engagement, Sectoral Performance Review, and Ministerial Management Retreat of the Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy, held in Lagos on Thursday.

Operators Raise the Alarm
Representatives of local barge operators used the platform to allege that certain foreign interests are engaged in a deliberate campaign to undermine their operations. They told the Minister that policies, operational bottlenecks, and preferential treatment allegedly extended to foreign-linked entities by some terminal operators are tilting the competitive landscape against Nigerian businesses.

The operators warned that if left unaddressed, the situation could erode local capacity and destabilise Nigeria’s maritime logistics ecosystem.

NSC Given the Mandate
Responding to the allegations, Dr Oyetola reaffirmed the Federal Government’s commitment to protecting local investments and ensuring a level playing field in the maritime sector. He directed the NSC — in its capacity as port economic regulator — to conduct a thorough and impartial investigation into the claims.

Advertisement

The Minister was unequivocal: any anti-competitive behaviour or policy inconsistency that disadvantages Nigerian businesses would not be tolerated.

Engagement as Policy Tool
Dr Oyetola also used the occasion to underscore the importance of regular stakeholder engagement in driving effective sectoral governance. He noted that the government remains firmly focused on developing the marine and blue economy as a pillar of national growth, employment generation, and sustainable development.

See also  NIWA MD Calls for Blue Economy Adoption to Drive Sustainable Growth

Nigeria Watch
The allegations against terminal operators echo long-standing concerns in the Nigerian maritime industry about the marginalisation of indigenous players in port operations. Local barge operators form a critical link in Nigeria’s cargo evacuation chain — particularly at Apapa and Tin Can Island ports — and their displacement would deepen the country’s dependence on foreign logistics providers.

The NSC’s mandate as port economic regulator makes it the appropriate body to probe these claims. However, the effectiveness of the investigation will depend on the Council’s willingness to act on its findings — including, where necessary, imposing sanctions on terminal operators found to have violated fair competition principles.
For the Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy, Thursday’s engagement signals a more assertive posture on indigenous content in maritime logistics — one that stakeholders will be watching closely.

Advertisement

Waterways News — Covering Nigeria’s Maritime, Shipping and Blue Economy Sector

Facebook Comments Box
Continue Reading

Blue Economy

Tinubu Approves Cargo Tracking Scheme That Could Save Nigeria N900bn in Lost Import Revenue

Published

on

Tinubu Approves Cargo Tracking Scheme That Could Save Nigeria N900bn in Lost Import Revenue

Presidential approval secured for ICTN as Nigerian Shippers’ Council begins procurement; scheme expected to go live before year-end

By Emetena Ikuku, Lagos

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the full implementation of the International Cargo Tracking Note (ICTN), a flagship initiative of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) designed to plug revenue leakages in the country’s import trade and strengthen regulatory oversight of inbound cargo.
The approval, confirmed at a stakeholders’ engagement convened by the Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy in Lagos, ends months of uncertainty over the scheme’s future and sets the stage for what industry analysts say could be one of the most consequential reforms in Nigeria’s maritime sector in recent years.

Advertisement

What the ICTN Does
The ICTN is a real-time, online cargo tracking system that monitors the movement of inbound shipments from origin to destination. Beyond logistics visibility, it is designed to function as an economic intelligence tool — capturing import data that can be used to close gaps in revenue declaration and combat under-invoicing.
Industry projections suggest the system could help Nigeria recover up to N900 billion annually in import revenue currently lost to leakages — a figure that underscores the commercial stakes of getting the rollout right.

Procurement Underway
Pius Akutah, Executive Secretary and CEO of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council, confirmed to stakeholders that presidential approval had been secured and that procurement processes were already in motion. He expressed confidence that the ICTN would become operational before the end of the year.
Akutah acknowledged that previous implementation attempts had been suspended due to unresolved operational challenges, but said the Council had drawn lessons from those setbacks.
He noted that the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Adegboyega Oyetola, is personally committed to ensuring a seamless rollout, with the ministry taking deliberate steps to resolve all outstanding issues before the scheme goes live.

See also  Customs Reforms Essential for Unlocking Africa's Economic Potential – Adeniyi

Nigeria Watch
The ICTN revival is significant beyond its revenue implications. For years, Nigerian freight forwarders, cargo agents, and port operators have operated in an environment where cargo data is fragmented and often unreliable — creating fertile ground for manifest fraud, valuation disputes, and customs evasion.
A fully operational ICTN would give the NSC, the Nigeria Customs Service, and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) access to a unified cargo data stream, potentially transforming how import risk is assessed at Apapa, Tin Can Island, and the emerging Lekki Deep Sea Port.
For the broader blue economy agenda being championed by Minister Oyetola, real-time cargo intelligence also supports Nigeria’s ambitions to position its ports as West Africa’s premier logistics hub — a goal that requires the kind of regulatory credibility the ICTN is designed to provide.
Stakeholders will be watching the procurement timeline closely. The scheme has been suspended before, and the maritime industry’s confidence in its delivery will depend on whether the ministry can demonstrate tangible progress before the year runs out.

Facebook Comments Box
Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2026