News
EFCC To Assists Nigeria Customs To Recoup N10.6bn From Banks – Lawmakers


Lawmakers have revealed that it’s Committee on Customs was working with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and others to recover the N10.6bn customs and excise duties collected by five commercial banks.
The Chairman of the committee, Leke Abejide, stated this at an investigative hearing organised by his panel.
He said that the committee was determined to recover all unremitted funds and block all leakages before the end of 2021.
He said that the committee was currently working with the Federal Ministry of Finance, the Central Bank of Nigeria and the EFCC on the recovery mission.
Abejide directed all the affected banks to provide necessary document to the auditors for reconciliation and onward payment.
He said, “We have been on this assignment for about a year now. It was because of COVID-19 that we could not do much last year but we are determined to finish it before the end of 2021.
“The assignment is so important because the major issues confronting Nigeria today is inadequate revenue and this is as a result of leakages everywhere.
“We are going to make sure that any money belonging to the Nigerian Customs Service that have not been given to them or that is being delayed or used for business is recovered; we are determined.
“We have not done much; we have only checked five banks and we have discovered N10.6bn.”
The commercial banks which were represented by top officials said that the disputed amount could be reconciled if the auditors sit with the banks to compare notes.
The committee resolved that the commercial banks must interface with the auditors, reconcile grey areas and report to the committee within two weeks.
-



News2 days agoIkpe Hails Mbala’s ‘Rebirth’ As Afurobi Commends Community Drive at Secretariat Commissioning
-



GRPolitics5 days agoSenator Aishatu Binani Defects to NDC
-



News5 days agoTinubu to Travel to Kenya, Rwanda and France from May 2
-



News5 days agoMay Day 2026: Sanwo-Olu Approves N50,000 monthly economic relief package for workers






