The South-East Zone of the Amalgamated
Market Traders Association has raised the alarm over the worsening cases
of extortion by security officials on highways in the country.
The President of the association, Chief
Okwudili Ezenwankwo, who made the allegation while addressing traders at
Oba, near Onitsha, accused men of the Nigeria Customs Service and the
police of barricading highways to extort motorists and traders.
He said that the presence of customs men
and police officers mounting road blocks to extort motorists and
traders had made a mess of the anti-corruption campaign of the Federal
Government.
He wondered why containers, belonging to
traders should be stopped and searched at various points from Lagos and
to the South-East by customs men and the police after such containers
had been cleared at the ports.
He said, “We want the Federal Government
to move customs men and the police out of the roads because the only
thing they do is extortion.
“It is only in Nigeria you see customs men on the roads.
“If they have anything to do with searching our goods, it should be at the ports or borders.
“Stopping containers on the road, searching and extorting money from legitimate traders is unfair.”
He argued that the anti-corruption
campaign of the present administration would only have meaning when the
government addressed low-level corruption by security officials.
He said, “Forcing hard working Nigerians
to part with their hard-earned money every day by policemen, customs
men and other security agents should not be happening in the current
dispensation.”
The president, however, called for the
activation of the Onitsha Inland Port to ease the suffering of importers
and the difficulty associated with moving goods to the South-East.
He commended Governor Willie Obiano of
Anambra for suspending taxes and various levies being paid by petty
traders, hawkers and wheelbarrow pushers in various markets in the
state.
Ezenwaknwo also lauded the State Government’s plan to execute N10m projects in each of the 61 markets in the state.
The Chairman of AMATAS in Idemili, Mr.
Chuma Eruchalu, said that extortion had remained a major challenge for
traders in the country.
He said, “You find that goods after
being cleared at the borders and ports, customs officials still keep
disturbing consignments and extorting money from owners of such goods.
“Even when you buy goods in the open
market across the country, they still extort money by seizing some of
the vehicles in the hope that you settle them.
“You find police doing the jobs of customs and asking you to provide customs documents used for clearing goods.”
Eruchalu told government to put the ‘Change’ mantra into action by calling security agents to order.
The Chairman of the Oba Building Materials International Market, Mr. Chris Okafor, commended Obiano’s developmental strides.
He assured the governor that traders would support his second term bid.
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