The
Nigeria Customs Service on Wednesday intercepted three consignments containing
140 species of snakes and 660 other animals imported into Nigeria from
Cameroon.
The
containers were brought in aboard a Cameroonian vessel, “MV Flesh”,
through the Calabar waterways to the National Inland Waterways Authority jetty
in Calabar, Cross River State.
The
other animals which were identified as geckos, millipedes, hairy frogs and
spiders, were said to be worth about N6.9m.
The Customs
Area Comptroller in charge of Calabar Free Trade Zone – Cross River and Akwa
Ibom commands – Mrs. Nanbyen Burromvyat, said the consignments were intercepted
by vigilant officers on July 24, 2017.She said the consignments, which were
Lagos-bound, were prohibited items under the Schedule 3 of the Revised Import
Prohibition List (Trade) in the Common External Tariff.
A
packaging list of the items made available to our correspondent identified the
species of snakes to include Atheris squamigera, Bitis gobanica,
Dasypeltis ssp and Boiga pulverinata, while the geckos were Hemidactylus
frenatus and Hemidactylus fasciatus.
The
millipede, hairy frogs and spiders were of the Architreptulus,
Trichobatrachus robustus and Arachnidae species respectively.
Without
opening the containers to prevent the escape of the animals, Burromvyat
handed over the items and the two suspects arrested to the authorities of the
Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Services for further investigation.
She
said, “These containers have animals of different sizes. They were brought in
on July 24, 2017, through the Calabar waterways.
“There
is no permit to bring live animals into the country. We have seized and we are
handing the animals over to the Nigerian Quarantine Services for further
action.
“I
do not know what they want to do with them, but I think that the animals are
dangerous because they include snakes, spiders, geckos and other
creatures. We have enough snakes around Nigeria already.”
The
officer in charge of the Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Services in Cross
River State, Mr. Sunday Ukut, said the animals would be properly scrutinised
after which they might be destroyed.
He
said, “We will take them to the office and conduct further investigations.
These animals came in without the necessary import papers and these are highly
prohibited animals. So, we are going to carry out our own screening on them and
possibly destroy them. They came in from Cameroon.”
The
suspect who allegedly brought in the consignments from Cameroon, Mr. Julius
Novigana, said they were given to him by a friend to deliver to someone in
Lagos.
Novigana,
a Cameroonian agent, claimed that he did not know what were in the three
containers, adding that his friend only asked him to deliver the consignments
to an unidentified person in Lagos.
“A
friend gave them to me in Cameroon to deliver to someone in Lagos. I only have
the man’s number in Lagos. I have called him and he said he would send someone
to pick them from me in Calabar,” he said.
The
Captain of the vessel that brought the consignment, Victor Agbor, also a
Cameroonian, said he did not spot the containers when he was about leaving his
country.
“I
did not see these containers on the vessel when I left Cameroon. The name of my
vessel is MV Flesh and we bring in passengers and general
cargo from Cameroon to Nigeria.
“I
never saw these containers on board before leaving.
“I
was informed in Nigeria that there were some containers without manifestoes in
the vessel. I do not have any idea about them,” he said.
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