Economy News

By Oluwatoyin Adegoke 

Business activities are yet to reach the peak around Idi-roko border in Ogun State since the pronouncement of border opening by the Federal government.

Business owners and residents of the border communities have attributed the slow pace of operations to the persisting ban on the trade of some commodities usually in high demand around the borderlines. 

Apart from travellers and investors in international trade operating through the trade facilitation process of the Nigeria Customs Service, artisans and small scale business men and women operating around the border areas said they were not sure that the government had opened the borders. 

The low tempo of commercial activities was evident in Ajegunle, Ipokia, Ijofin, Mahun, Ilara, and other communities where many shops and business outlets hitherto involved in the sales of imported items, popularly called “Tokunbo” were out of operations. 

Those who spoke with Radio Nigeria, including a vulcanizer and tyre merchant, Mr Jimoh Ige maintained that although, the borders were said to be opened, the ban on importation of Tokunbo items, especially rice, had crippled their activities. 

Another resident, Mr. Dare Olaiwin also said the ban on movement of petroleum products within twenty kilometers radius to the borderlines should be reviewed as it had greatly hindered business activities in the area.

Mr Olaiwin expressed optimism that making the fuel available to residents of border areas would enable them to engage in fruitful ventures and contribute to the process of national development. 

Other contributors, who noted the sharp decline in the tempo of cross border trading, urged the government to empower genuine small scale business owners to invest in legitimate trades across the borders. 

In a reaction, the Acting Comptroller General of Customs, Mr Adewale Adeniyi, who paid a working visit to the Idiroko border charged the customs operatives to strengthen measures towards promoting legitimate businesses between Nigeria and the neighbouring countries.

The Controller General of Customs solicited the support of the people and other relevant agencies in the efforts to rid the borders of smuggling, human trafficking and drug trafficking among other vices against national peace economic stability.

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Foreign

Police in India have arrested two men in connection with the deaths of four people near the US-Canada border in January 2022.

The bodies, including that of a three-year-old child, were found lying together frozen in a field in Canada’s Manitoba, 12 metres away from the US border.

Authorities in Gujarat state, where the family was from, said the arrested men were “illegal immigration” agents.

Police are also trying to arrest two agents based in the US and Canada.

The family – Jagdish Patel, 39, Vaishaliben, 37, their daughter, Vihangi, 11 and son, Dharmik, 3 – were from Gujarat’s Dingucha village, where many locals aspired to move abroad. The news of their tragic deaths – they walked hours in -35C temperatures – made headlines around the world.

The Patels were among a group of 11 people from Gujarat who were trying to enter the US. The other seven people in the group were detained by US authorities after they crossed the border.

“The city crime branch has registered an offence in a case wherein the accused (agents) had forced 11 people to walk in the snow in a bid to get them illegally cross the US-Canada border, causing the death of four members of a family,” Chaitanya Mandlik, a senior police official in Gujarat’s Ahmedabad, told reporters.

The Canadian Press, a news agency, reported that the arrested men have been accused of “acting as immigration agents, supplying the family members of a family,” Chaitanya Mandlik, a senior police official in Gujarat’s Ahmedabad, told reporters.

The Canadian Press, a news agency, reported that the arrested men have been accused of “acting as immigration agents, supplying the family members paperwork and helping them get to the US”.

The charges against them include human trafficking, criminal conspiracy and culpable homicide not amounting to murder.

“The victims were taken to Toronto in Canada and later to Vancouver. The agents then dumped them at Winnipeg in Manitoba province leaving them to cross over to the US on their own,” Indian news agency PTI quoted Mr Mandlik as saying.

Manitoba police told The Canadian Press that there was “no evidence to suggest the Patel family travelled to Vancouver”.

The Canadian police added that they were working with “international law enforcement partners to advance the investigation into the deaths”.

BBC/Taiwo Akinola

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