Nigerian Senate has vowed to publish names of importers and banks
involved in over N30 trillion alleged foreign exchange frauds
perpetrated between 2006 and 2017.
Chairman, Senate Committee on Customs, Sen. Hope Uzodinma, stated
this Thursday on the second day of meeting with representatives of all
commercial banks, the Central Bank of Nigeria and Ministry of Finance.
He said the committee had given documents containing names of
importers allegedly involved in the act and other details to the
commercial banks to study.
“The Senate is worried with the state of our economy and we have
decided to investigate the dwindling value of our Naira as well as the
state of forex that is affecting the economy negatively.
“We will publish the names of importers and banks involved in this fraudulent act.
“The purpose of giving the banks these documents is for them to go
and identify the importers that were their customers and work out ways
of returning the un-utilised portion of the foreign exchange allocated
to them.
“We have the names of the importers, how much was given to them and
other details, which are contained in the documents handed over to the
banks,’’ he said.
The lawmaker decried that the release of forex to fictitious
importers had denied genuine importers access to Forex, causing economic
hardship.
“Commercial banks were trusted and given dealer status,
unfortunately we were not able to see the importation that was made with
the forex released.
“We profiled utilisation of Forex within the period and went further
to establish that letters of credit for doing business were linked to
companies abroad.
“We did not stop there; we also went to Customs and there was no
evidence of import duty payment, payment of Value Added Tax and other
requirements”.
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