Customs comb Lagos markets for smuggled rice
Officials of the Nigeria Customs Service have stormed some markets in Lagos in search of smuggled rice.
Their efforts led to the seizure of about six trailer load of rice from shops at the Iddo Railway Terminus.
Some of the rice dealers, who spoke to 
our correspondent, complained that they bought the rice from people who 
brought them into the markets and had no way of knowing whether it was 
smuggled or not.
The owner of a shop where the NCS men 
reportedly seized 5,000 bags of rice was said to have collapsed and was 
rushed to a nearby hospital.
“The value of rice seized from her shop 
is over N60m and she took a loan from the bank for the business,” one of
 the dealers, who pleaded anonymity, told our correspondent.
The source said, “They swooped on the 
markets in the afternoon, brandishing guns. They locked up the shops and
 went away, only to come back in the middle of the night, around 2am to 
break into the shops and cart away all the bags of rice they found 
there. They came back to cart away more rice.
“Women are the ones selling in the 
markets, the Customs are supposed to be at the borders to prevent 
smuggled rice from coming into the country, but they allowed the rice to
 come in, only to come harassing traders with guns. We are pleading with
 them to return the rice to the traders.”
When consulted, the spokesperson for the
 NCS, Mr. Wale Adeniyi, said the organisation was empowered by law to 
impound any product suspected to be smuggled wherever such product could
 be found.
He said, “The rice was smuggled. We got information that the consignment was taken to a particular place and we went there.
“It is a message to smugglers that it is
 not just enough to bring goods across the border into the country; the 
goods can be seized even when they are in the country.”
Adeniyi advised Nigerians to desist from act of smuggling and go through the legitimate route to bring in their goods.
The NCS has maintained its ban on the importation of rice through the land borders.
The country consumes six million metric 
tonnes of rice annually. Local production accounts for less than 40 per 
cent, leaving a wide gap, which is filled by importation and smuggling.
According to the Federal Government, 
prices of rice which have risen to between N20,000 and N22,000 per 50kg 
bag from about N7,000 in 2015, are expected to come down in November.
The NCS has also set 2017 as a target to stop the importation of rice.

 
 
 
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