Vice President Yemi Osinbajo being assisted by Speaker, House of Representative, Hon. Yakubu Dogara and Minister of Transportation, Rt. Hon. Rotimi Amaechi, to unveil the new NIMASA logo in Abuja, recently.
BOAT operators under the aegis of the Association of Tourist Boat Operators and Water Transportation of Nigeria (ATBOWATON) have raised the alarm that the move by the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) to register all boats operating in the nation’s waterways with engines above 200 horse power might lead to multiple taxation on boat operators by the agency and the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA).
This is even as the operators explained that the NIWA, which is the agency saddled with the responsibility of regulating activities on the nation’s inland waterways had just recently increased its taxes payable by boat operators in Nigeria.
It would be recalled that NIMASA had recently instructed the boat operators plying the Nigeria’s inland waterways with engines above 200 horse power to come and register such boats so as to ensure security and safety of the operators and users of the waters in the countrty.
Speaking to selected newsmen in Lagos recently, the President, ATBOWATON, Mr. Ganiyu Sekoni Balogun disclosed that although the agency promised that the exercise was not aimed at making money out of the operators, he advised NIMASA not to take the operators 20 steps backwards.
Balogun however attested to the fact that the proposed boats registration by NIMASA was a welcomed development as it would assist the boat operators work efficiently with the police in the event of theft of their boats or its engine as the information supplied to NIMASA in its database could suffice.
According to him,” There was a publication in the newspaper about engines, that any boat above 200 horse power engines should come and register it for safety and security reasons. We wrote to NIMASA and said to them that we want to see them to discuss about it and we went to their office and they welcomed us, they listened to us, they were very friendly, they promised us that they are not using it to make money as it is not an avenue for making money but for data collections on the boats that plies the waterways and the type of engines they are using and I told them that we don’t have to take ourselves 20 steps backwards.
“Formerly, the biggest engine was 45 horse powers and that was the biggest engine that carries about 40 people at a time. Now we have 250 horse power engine on a boat. The size of the boat determines the type of engine you are going to use and the bigger the engine, the more fuel you use. So, at the end of the day, it is not even economically good for us but the world is now on the fast lane. We have a jumbo jet that carry 200 people at a time now. Those days, maybe the maximum passengers a boat could carry are 50 and they still fly.
“These were what I told the Director that met with us that day and he listened to us and said that although we have to pay some amount of money and I told him that that will now become multiple taxation. NIWA is the one that is in charge of the inland waterways, they have registered us, we are paying all the levies and charges to them, if you say that we have to come and pay for collecting data, it will look somehow.
“So, they should listen to us, we are ready to provide them with the information concerning our boats. We will gladly supply them with information they required because if my boat is stolen, invariably, NIMASA can pass the information to the police from their data and anywhere they see the boat or the engine, It can be recovered back or even if they take my boat and use it for robbery or to go and do anything harmful, I can be exonerated after letting them know its been stolen. But asking us to pay for such services will amount to multiple taxation.”
"His emergence at this critical time in the life of the Church and the world…
The Chairman of the Ifedara Local Council Development Area in Ekiti, Sunday Ogunsanya has empowered…
Like his predecessors, Robert Prevost, upon election, has chosen to be called Pope Leo XIV.…
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has clarified that it has not yet made any…
"Out of the recovered sum, US$50 million would be deployed to funding the Distributed Access…
The Commissioner of Police, Niger State Command, CP Adamu Abdullahi Elleman, on May 8, 2025,…
This website uses cookies.