The Minister of Finance Kemi Adeosun, on Tuesday, tasked the
Director-Generals of Customs and
African Union Commission to bring on
board the issue of 0.2% import levy and come out with the guidelines for
its implementation.
She based the call for the implementation on making it a permanent
source of funding for implementation by all members states as a
permanent source of funding activities of the Commission.
Adeosun made this disclosure at the first extraordinary meeting of
the African Union sub-committee of Directors-General of Customs in
Abuja.
The minister also pointed out to the meeting that Africa cannot
continue to settle for the position of the biggest world’s buyer without
selling to the world market in return.
According to her, the continent must come to the trade table as an
equal partner that is buying and selling in order to correct the
age-long embarrassment that has made its economy vulnerable.
Her words: “But on a more serious note, I really do welcome you. I
hope that the conversation would be deep, I hope they would be robust, I
hope that they would be patriotic to Africa. We need an African focus.
“We cannot continue to be the world’s biggest market for anybody who
wants to sell anything. We need to come to the trade table as equal
partners, selling as well as buying. And we must correct some historical
embarrasses that have made our economies very vulnerable.”
The minister noted that Nigeria is not just African’s largest economy
by size but African’s largest economy by impact, stressing that the
Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Customs Service, Col. Hameed Ali has
shown the way that Africans ought to go as the largest economy by
initiative- spearheading and hosting the meeting.
She revealed to the meeting that the administration of President
Muhammadu Buhari is very committed to the ease of doing business and it
has recently outlined a number of some radical changes in the
expectation of the public for service delivery.
The Nigeria Customs Service, said the minister, is the first part of
the changes, which has called for the need to re-engineer some of the
processes that the meeting was expected to come up with the strategies
for their implementation.
Speaking, Ali retired, recalled that since the decision to hold the
meeting in Harare, Zimbabwe in November 2016, the service had been
mobilising personnel and materials to provide a conducive environment
and a befitting welcome to make it most successful.
He said it was the expectation of the Nigerian Customs that the
meeting would bring all the African Union Customs Administration
together to articulate a common agenda and speak in unison during the
World Customs Organization’s Annual General Council Meeting coming up in
July 2017.
The meeting, according to him, would afford the African continent the
opportunity to occupy the rightful position in the WCO within the
administrative and political hierarchy and exert an authority to
influence policies that will be beneficial to the continent and enhance
the intra-African trade.
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