The Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) has warned Nigerians to
be wary of consuming killer rice that has flooded the market.
A statement by the forum’s Media and Public Affairs,
Abulrazaque Bello-Barkindo said a communiqué issued by the forum in Abuja last
week held that the imported rice contains poisonous substance that make people
sick and even kill some who consume them.
The statement however lamented that despite the poisonous
nature of the rice, the banned product still finds its way to the Nigerian
market on increasing rate.
“Governors expressed
concern that Nigerians were either falling sick or losing their lives to the
consumption of this substandard product even though some states have commenced
elaborate efforts to produce rice in commercial quantity with a view to halting
the nation’s over-reliance on staples that can be produced locally.
“Most governors of the states that have already embraced
the back to land mantra of this administration frowned at the situation where
Nigerians snubbed the locally produced commodity in preference for foreign ones
which were most of the time stale, contaminated or even fake,” the statement
said.
However, Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Customs
Service, Col. Hameed Ali who was represented by Deputy Comptroller General,
Dangaladima Aminu said that although some measures have and are being put in
place to salvage the situation, border communities, however, are part of the
challenges to curbing the menace. The Customs boss said this while briefing the
Governors’ Forum on the way out of the killer rice danger.
“It may interest you to note that a motorcycle can make up
to 30 trips with six 50kg bags of rice per night depending on the distance. And
when the border communities are not smuggling the produce themselves, they are
aiding or providing cover for smugglers.”
He informed the governors that the Customs “takes the issue
of smuggling of rice seriously, having identified the danger posed by it to the
economic well-being and health hazards it constitutes to the Nigerian people.”
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