Custom officials raid market for foreign rice, vegetable oil

Custom officials raid market for foreign rice, vegetable oil

Less than a week to Christmas, officers and men of the Adamawa/Taraba Command of the Nigeria Customs Service decided to raid Mubi town market for fore

Kevin Hart caught cheating on his pregnant wife plus his response
FG reassures Nigerians, says no plan to remove fuel subsidy   
Knight of Saint Mulumba cautions against vote buying, selling

Less than a week to Christmas, officers and men of the Adamawa/Taraba Command of the Nigeria Customs Service decided to raid Mubi town market for foreign rice and other contraband. The raid, led by the Comptroller, Kamardeen Olumoh, resulted in the seizure of many bags of foreign rice and the arrest of three suspects. The customs personnel, with reinforcement from the police, stormed the commercial border town main market around 11am and raided many shops and stores.

Mubi is the commercial nerve center of Adamawa state and shares a border with the republic of Cameroon. During the raid, items worth millions of naira were seized which include Foreign rice, vegetable oil and soft drinks.

Speaking on the development, the Comptroller said the raid was in compliance with a directive from the Comptroller-General of the service in Abuja. He said, “The menace of smuggling around this axis has been alarming for quite some time. The Comptroller-General of Customs ordered that the operations be carried out, that Mubi market must be mopped up of all smuggled items, especially foreign rice.

Olumoh said, “Today, we are in the market and we are able to evacuate large quantity of rice and this is a clear signal to smugglers. We are backed by the law. Section 147 of Customs and Excise Management Act has given us the power to enter or search premises day or night, to break and enter, make arrest; in fact, without warrant and that is exactly what we did today.”

There was, however, mixed reactions over the raid in Mubi. Most traders condemned the action of the customs, as they counted their losses.