Customs, NPA Officials in Nigeria Clash at Tin Can Port Over Access Control

November 13: Activities at the Tin Can Island Port were in the early hours of yesterday [November 13] disrupted following a clash between officials of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) and Customs personnel over port access control.

NPA had on Tuesday commenced implementation of its port access control at the Tin Can Island Port, with assistance from the Port Police as part of effort to sanitize the port environment from unauthorised users.

It was gathered that the NPA security officials had subjected port users and officials to strict scrutiny and those without its port pass were denied access.

The situation, however, degenerated into a scuffle when a Customs officer in mufti and shorts reportedly refused to identify and submit himself to checks on the request of the NPA officials, creating a scene and causing a long queue at the port gate.

“What happened was that NPA was trying to do the normal checking of authorised and unauthorised persons as usual. Then a Customs officer came in mufti and in shorts but he refused to identify himself. The mobile police officers asked him to step aside for other people to be identified but he refused until he engaged in a scuffle with a mobile police at the gate.

“Eventually when he gained access, he went and told their enforcement unit and they came heavily armed shooting and threw the gate open forcefully and people who were not supposed to come in all rushed in,” an eye witness to the incident told SHIPS & PORTS.

When contacted, Customs Public Relations Officer, Tin Can Island Port Command, Uche Ejesieme, denied the allegation against the officer, saying that the NPA gate was not pulled down as alleged.

He said, “NPA started gate control yesterday as part of effort to sanitize the port environment because it is normal for some unauthorised people to force themselves to have access.

“What happened was just a misunderstanding between those forcing themselves in with some of the officials manning the gate but it did not last for five minutes. An officer cannot come to the gate in uniform because everybody comes on Okada from Mile 2 to Tin Can, so the issue of wearing uniform or not is inconsequential. It was just a minor issue that has been resolved. Someone alleged they pulled down the gate but nobody pulled down any gate.”

Speaking on the enforcement of crowd control at the port, Port Manager, Tin Can Island Port, Umar Abubakar, told SHIPS & PORTS that the exercise was a normal routine put in place to control crowd and sanitize the port environment.

“What the port is doing is the mandatory exercise in terms of controlling access. We started yesterday and normal port activities still continue. It is not a new thing. Maybe it is the enforcement they are seeing as something new. We are only enforcing the busing in and busing out and also the crowd because if you come around Tin Can, it is always looking like a market place, so we are only trying to control the movement,” he said.   

Source: Ships & Ports / Shulammite ‘Foyeku

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