A scheme comprising officers at the Customs Division of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) and rogue importers are taking advantage of a lousy import ban on used mattresses to ship the product through the noses of law enforcers into the country.
Buoyed by the hot demand for the product and the high returns, the smugglers, mostly importers of cars and spare parts, have managed to develop strong ties with some custom officers , National Security officials and Ghana Port and Harbours Authority (GPHA) security officers to help make their activity conducive.
A GRAPHIC BUSINESS (GB) investigation uncovered that the Jubilee Terminal at the Tema Port has become porous and a safe haven for this illegality although the customs division says smuggling has mainly been made through undesignated entry points on the country’s borders, mainly inland.
As a result of the indulgence of the security officials in the smuggling syndicate, GB observed during the undercover investigation that, piles of mattresses arrive in shipping containers daily at the terminal and are subsequently cart away in mini trucks without any resistance from the security officials.
Beyond flouting the ban, the influx of the used mattresses through the Tema Port denies the country billions of Ghana Cedis in revenue, as importers are not charged duties on the import of the banned product.
Modus operandi
The paper also found out that senior customs officials normally secured import licences for importers who smuggled used mattresses under the guise of importing vehicles, spare parts and brand new mattresses.
After getting the licences for the importation of cars and spare parts from countries such as South Korea, United States of America and Canada, the importers, through the aid of the GRA officers, divert the original use of the licence to be able to indulge in the dark trade of importing these banned mattresses.
The mattresses are concealed in either cars or spare parts in shipping containers.
When these consignments arrive at the Tema Port, officials from the Customs Division of the GRA, who are part of this scheme but in charge of preventive services at the Jubilee Terminal of the Port, grant permission for the banned goods to be transported onto the market without any interference.
Ineffective ban
The government, through a Legislative Instrument (LI 1586) of 1994, placed a total ban on the importation of used mattresses and other used products from entering the country, citing health concerns.
The ban on used mattresses was also meant to allow local manufacturers to gain access to a larger market and expand their operations to create jobs for the unemployed.
However, importers of used mattresses are rather benefiting from the ban and are making huge profits from sales because they don’t officially declare the items and thereby skip payment of import duties on them.
Brisk business
Trade in used mattresses is booming. Hundreds of the banned merchandise is sold on the open market across the country on a daily basis. The prices of used mattresses are far cheaper compared to the locally manufactured ones. For instance, a used queen size mattress is sold between GH¢500 and GH¢700, whereas a locally manufactured queen size mattress is sold between GH¢1,160 and GH¢2000.
In some commercially vibrant suburbs of the capital, such as New Town, Lapaz, Kaneshie, Achimota etc.,trucks loaded with used mattresses, are offloaded in the wee hours of the morning by smugglers who then distribute to traders around the city.
Most of the mattresses find their way to traders in various parts of the capital, but according to sources who spoke to the paper in an interview; used mattresses had literally flooded the market in major towns across the country.
Although illegal, the local market has remained attractive for suppliers of used mattresses who have continued to knock on the country’s doors, notwithstanding the resistance from local authorities.
GRA’s response
The acting Commissioner of the Customs Division of the GRA, Mr Isaac Crenstil, speaking in an interview with the GRAPHIC BUSINESS on January 5, on the upsurge of used mattresses inundating the market with the help of some customs officials, said the smuggling of used mattresses was a criminal offence which the GRA was currently working in collaboration with other agencies to clamp down.
“We are not taking such practices lightly at all and presently we are embarking on a special operation to fish out such corrupt officials aiding the trade for prosecution and dismissal,” he added.
In spite of his claim, it is ironic that personnel from his outfit who are supposed to aid the exercise were deeply involved in the multimillion Ghana cedi trade.
An insider in the syndicate that imports and smuggles used mattresses, speaking to the paper on condition of anonymity, said: “Though smuggling through undesignated entry points is more problematic, it’s not beyond Customs capacity to curb.”
“It requires a more concerted national effort and political will to eliminate that kind of smuggling but smuggling through the Tema Port with such impunity and with help from security officials is nothing but a shame,” she added.
Meanwhile, the source told the paper that some customs officials, who resisted the illegality, received threatening calls from highly placed officials within the service, ordering them to release the goods at the port once they arrived in the country.
Source: Graphic Business
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This artikle was written by someon with a low IQ. There is a common sense reason why there are mattresses in the containers with the cars
What is wrong with bringing used mattress if u are not intending to sell it or sleep on it? This is a stuppppiddd law
Bringing a used mattress should not be outlawed. Selling them as sleeping material IS WHAT SHOULD be offensive.
Mattresses can be used for other things than sleeping and those things do not require health issues.
mattresses are USED TO CUSHION the cars in shipping containers to prevent them banging about on the ships
Bringing used cars, some of which are as sold as 10 years, just to produce toxic smokes and thereby degrading the ozone layer is very worrying.
If your boss is threatening you to do the wrong thing, just secretly record it with your phone and use as evidence against him. GHANAFO) NIE, CORRUPTION NIE! If I come back to work in Ghana, I will be corrupt, so I like where I am working now. I HAVE BEEN SAYING THAT AN AVERAGE GHANAIAN IS CORRUPT!
Part of the report that some Officers procure import licence for some importers can not be true. The era of import licence ii a forgone history. And also saying the people did not pay anything to the state need to be proved, because supposed they were declared as new what could the officers do? I am not holding brief for them but we must be careful of the news we put out there for public consumption.
Inew they will start soo. The Nana peoples party are enriching themself with corupt practices
Graphic could have done a better iob on smuggling of banned items without singling out used mattresses. In a typical container, the number of used mattresses happen to be insignificant compared to so many other banned items that find their ways to the market; fridges and other electronic gadgets, clothes, etc. As a person with knowledge of the type of importation that include these goods, I'll suggest to the journalist to find out why people will do these kind of things. It is not that profitable and attractive per se for the importers involved. No. The customs officials and the importers all know that the practice is only a means for the importers to cut their losses due to the unreasonably high and illogical import duties (taxes) and fees at the harbour. Find out why the average person has to pay as much as GHC 40,000 for a 2013 Toyota Corolla needed for commute to improve productivity when the purchase price and freight to the importer was merely GHS18,000 equivalent in dollars? The price buildup will include GHS 17,000 of duties and fees at the harbour. They are able to sell these cars at prices Ghanaians can afford by reducing their costs through the adding these items that have ready markets. After all, Ghana doesn't produce vehicles in quantities to feed the market but there's an unthinking punitive import taxes on vehicles. If anyone cares to find out, businesses mostly adopt clandestine schemes to survive when the state uses draconian tax rates to seize their capital. Import duties in Ghana are great, easy, sources of revenue. Unfortunately, it appears that they are only imposed with the revenue thinking considered, not the other consequences like costs of goods and incentives to smuggle. It is this lazy approach to revenue mobilization that promote these smuggling and other bad things at the port. Let me ask again, why should the tax component of a very essential item sold on the market, something that the nation does not produce but REQUIRES, be about 50% of the sales price, and still be seen as normal. SICK!