Despite the Federal Government’s ban on the supply of petroleum products
to filling stations within 20-kilometre radius to the country’s land
borders, the product is reportedly being sold in border towns in Katsina
State, DAILY NIGERIAN reliably gathered.
Recall that on
Thursday, November 7, the Comptroller General of the Nigeria Customs
Service, NCS, Hameed Ali, had directed that no petroleum products should
be supplied to any filling station within 20 kilometres to the borders
in the country.
However, investigations by the DAILY NIGERIAN
revealed that some filing stations located at the border communities of
Daura and Jibiya are having a field day as the products is openly sold
in a broad day light without recourse to the ban.
It was also
gathered that in Daura, which has fallen within the banned territories,
as it is13 kilometres away from the border, petroleum product is freely
being supplied to filling stations within the town.
DAILY
NIGERIAN reports that this development came at a time when soaring fuel
scarcity hit border towns in Ogun, Lagos, Adamawa, Katsina, Jigawa and
Sokoto States, as petroleum is reportedly sold at N600 a litre,
crippling business activities in the areas.
Our reporter, who was
in Daura, observed that some filling stations within the vicinity of
the town are open as motorists buy fuel freely.
Also, our
reporter who visited Jibiya town observed that the product is sold at
some filling stations such as Himma Oil, S. Nova, Ammani Oil, Wali Oil
Limited, Kamsus Oil and Fulani Yarima Petroleum Company all scattered
across the town.
A source told this reporter that these filing
stations were selected by the Customs operatives to sell the product,
just as another source said that these filing stations had not yet
exhausted the supplies they got before the ban.
However, DAILY
NIGERIAN contacted the Chairman of the Independent Petroleum Marketers
Association of Nigeria, IPMAN, Kano branch, Bashir Dan-mallam disclosed
that the ban was actually effective in these areas, saying “whoever
sells products after ban, the fuel is not supplied to him, but an old
stock that did not finish even after the FG’s decision”.
Mr
Dan-Mallam added that even the independent marketers had stopped
supplying the products to the affected areas, even as he disclosed that
some of their trucks had many at times been intercepted by the Customs
operatives en route to the areas.
“When our trucks got
intercepted by the customs operatives once, twice and more, we
completely stopped supplying in order to fully comply with the
government’s directive,” Mr Dan-Mallam said.
Meanwhile, today
(Thursday), the Katsina State branch of the Department of Petroleum
Resources, DPR, said it has halted the sales of fuel in 50 fuel stations
in the Jibiya border community of the state.
The state field
office DPR Operation Controller, Mohammed Sani, made the disclosure
after a monitoring tour at the border communities.
Mr Sani said,
“we have been to the border communities in Katsina to monitor compliance
with the Federal government’s directive on no fuel sales within twenty
kilometres distance from Nigeria borders.”
Mr Sani also noted that he had led other top DPR officials in monitoring fuel sale in katsina and its surrounding communities.
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