‘Nigeria spends N400bn on sugar importation in 4 years’

Nigeria spent about N400 billion on the importation of raw sugar from 2013 to 2016, the head of a House of Representatives committee investigating sugar waivers has said.
APC-Iseyin/Itesiwaju/Kajola/Iwajowa Federal Constituency, Abiodun Olasupo, told journalists in Iseyin on Sunday evening that this was in spite of the waivers to enhance local production.
Olusupo’s committee is investigating the waiver given to some companies on sugar importation from 2013 to 2016.
“This is paid in dollars, encouraging the outflow of our hard earned foreign exchange. From the record at our disposal now, the three companies licensed to import raw sugar are in a deficit of about N322 billion as waivers with nothing on ground. The effort of the waiver is to have 70 per cent production of sugar locally,” he said.
He said local production of sugar would create jobs for the unemployed and reduce outflow of foreign exchange.
Olasupo said it was also meant to ensure that 80 per cent of materials were sourced locally by 2018.
He said based on presentations made at the panel’s first public hearing, Nigeria has yet to achieve 10 per cent of the requirements on sugarcane production, adding that the task ahead of his committee was huge.
On the outcry over the reordering of election sequence, he said the exercise was the constitutional duty of the National Assembly.
“What we have done is to re-order the sequence of election and for INEC to put the dates.
“The sequence which INEC has been working on since was established through an Act by the National Assembly and there should be no problem in amending it.
“NASS is the theatre of democracy. The Constitution empowers it to make laws, executive to implement and when there is disagreement on its interpretation, it goes to the judiciary.” (NAN)

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