The Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA) says its members will not pay the registration fee demanded by the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC).
“The clearing agents’ registration fee initiated by the NSC negated the Federal Government’s policy on the Ease of Doing Business at ports,” ANLCA’s National Vice President, Dr Collins Farinto said.
This was contained in a statement made available to newsmen in Lagos on Sunday.
According to him, “the Council for the Regulation of Freight Forwarding in Nigeria (CRFFN) Act empowers only CRFFN to regulate and collect registration fees from freight forwarders in the industry.
“Meanwhile the CRFFN will soon commence collection of Practitioners Operating Fees (POF) and still expect freight forwarders to also pay their annual subscriptions fees.
“The question is what is the meaning of Registration Fees to be collected by the Nigerian Shippers’ Council,” Farinto said.
He said that the NSC was expected to protect the interest of Nigerian shippers and ensure that stakeholders were not given arbitrary and illegitimate charges.
Farinto said that ANLCA expected the NSC to address the hardship its members were going through in the industry.
The ANLCA chief, however, pleaded with the Executive Secretary of the NSC, Mr Hassan Bello to intervene and direct his officers to discontinue the registration fees.
The NSC had on Feb. 27 announced a 50 per cent cut on the registration fees it recently introduced for operators in the maritime sector.
The NSC proposed the fees after consultations with relevant stakeholders.
The breakdown shows that shipping line agencies and seaport terminal operators would now pay N50,000 down from N100,000, while inland container depot operators would pay N25,000 instead of N50,000.
Warehouse operators, off-dock terminal operators, stevedoring companies and cargo.
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