N567bn scam: Senate probes Customs, FIRS

Hamilton Nwosa
Writer

Ad

Tinubu Presides over Council of State, Set to Present Nominees for INEC Chair

By Abiola Olawale President Bola Tinubu is currently presiding over the National Council of State meeting at the Presidential Villa. It was gathered that the President is expected to present his nominees for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) chairmanship during the meeting. The development came after the recent exit of Professor Mahmood Yakubu, whose…

Putin says Russian air defenses responsible for Azerbaijani jet’s crash last year, killing 38

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday said that Russia’s air defenses were responsible for shooting down an Azerbaijani airliner in December that killed 38 people in his first admission of blame for the crash. Putin made the statement at a meeting with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliev in Tajikistan’s capital of Dushanbe, where both are attending…

Elder statesman, broadcaster, and diplomat Christopher Kolade dies at 92

By Obinna Uballa Nigeria has lost one of its most respected public figures, Dr. Christopher Kolade, CON - the revered diplomat, broadcaster, and corporate leader - who passed away peacefully on Wednesday, October 8, 2025, at the age of 92. His family announced his passing in a statement on Thursday, expressing gratitude for “his incredible…

Ad

Senate-President-Bukola-Saraki1-360x225The Senate on Thursday commenced investigation into the alleged unauthorised spending of N567bn being the cost of tax collected by the Nigerian Customs Service and the Federal Inland Revenue Service from January 2005 to July 2015.

A non-governmental organisation, Legislative Watch, dragged the two Federal Government agencies to the Senate through a petition that was sent to the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, on 13 August, 2015.

The Senate, thereafter, referred the petition to its Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions.

A document from the Federal Ministry of Finance, presented to the committee by the petitioner, indicated that the average monthly collection cost of the NCS was N2.5bn which put the total amount not remitted by NCS for 126 months (January 2005 to July 2015) at N315bn.

 Similarly, the document showed that the average monthly cost of collection of the FIRS was put at N2bn which put the total amount not remitted by FIRS over the same period at N252bn.

The two figures added together, put the cost of collection for both agencies at N567bn.

Defending the petition before the committee, the Executive Secretary of Legislative Watch, Ngozi Ihuoma, alleged that the amount represented the seven per cent cost of tax collection paid to the NCS and the four per cent also paid to the FIRS during the period.

The group alleged that the two agencies deducted the money from the amount collected on behalf of the Federal Government without appropriation by the National Assembly, contrary to the provisions of the constitution.

Specifically, Ihuoma claimed that the action of the agencies’ management was against sections 162 (3) and 165 of the Constitution.

He said the group explained that former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in 2004, approved the payment of seven per cent to the NCS and four per cent to the FIRS as cost of collection in line with Section 165 of the 1999 Constitution.

He said, “We have observed that deduction of the cost of collection started in January 2005 and the two agencies have been receiving the said percentages without appropriation from the National Assembly.”

Ad

Unlocking Opportunities in the Gulf of Guinea during UNGA80
X whatsapp