Worried by the huge financial
losses lack of a credible regulator is causing postal and courier services
operators in the country , some aggrieved stakeholders are set to brace all
hurdles and canvass the passage of the Postal and Courier Services Commission
Bill, after over 10 years of its submission to the National Assembly for
enactment into law. ISAIAH ERHIAWARIEN captures the position
of the stakeholders on the pending Bill.
In what could be likened to a desperate
move to get a credible regulator for the courier services sector in Nigeria,
some key stakeholders have intensified pressure on the National Assembly
to
pass into law, the Postal and Courier Services Commission Bill into law, after
staying in its hallowed chambers for almost a decade.
The private courier services companies,
which began operation in the country shortly after independence in 1960, have
since then been operating without a regulatory framework with the attendant
negative implications for the development of the sector and investment returns
for operators.
After several years of waiting endlessly
for a regulatory regime that would guide the players on how best to operate for
national economic benefits, the operators and other stakeholders are set to
pursue the agenda of a law for the sub-sector of the communication industry
with renewed vigour before the end of this current National Assembly and by so
doing, place the issue of the bill in the front burner of legislative
deliberations whenever the 9th Assembly is inaugurated.
Investigations revealed that President-elect,
Gen. Muhammadu Buhari in 1985 split the then Department of Post and
Telecommunication, P & T into Nigeria Telecommunications, NITEL and Nigeria
Postal Service, NIPOST thereby placing the regulation of the industry in the
hands of a department, Courier Regulatory Department, CRD, which is within the
NIPOST.
The CRD since then has been regulating
the sector industry but the enormous potentials of the industry as indicated by
its sporadic growth as well as the currently dwindling fortune of the sector
recently has prompted some stakeholders to call for an urgent reform. In 2002,
a group of private courier operators got together in Lagos and formed an
association, Association of Nigeria Courier Operators, ANCO, which today has
become a mouthpiece for private courier operators in Nigeria.
President of the Association, Oladapo
Siyanbola in chat said that the call for the courier industry reform was
cardinal for the formation of the Association years ago stating that major
landmark feat that the sector is waiting to experience is the passage of the
Postal and Courier Services Commission bill into law.
According to him, what the industry has
now as a regulator is the Courier Regulatory Department, CRD, within NIPOST,
noting that it does not have the powers to regulate, transform and protect the
postal sector.
The top industry player revealed that
since the split of P & T and NITEL in 1985, there has not been an
noticeable reform in the entire Postal sector noting that it has negatively
affected the growth of the sector so much that the numbers of private courier
operators in the country has dropped from 293 to merely 80.
National Mirror gathered that the
agitation for reform in the sector began in 2004 when the first Courier Summit
was held in Lagos, which culminated to the demand for a Postal and Courier
Services Regulatory Commission.
Siyanbola explained that the Postal and
Courier Services Commission bill was sent to the 6th and 7th National Assembly
for debate and subsequent passage but was not passed until the end of the two
Assemblies, expired.
He added that an executive bill was later
send to the Assembly for consideration and passage stating that if not passed
into law before the life of the current Assembly ends, it means sponsors of the
Bill will have to start afresh thereby protracting the misfortunes of the
Postal and Courier Services sector.
While expressing optimism that the
passages of Bill will address the current problem of lack credible regulator
for the sector, he cited the examples of countries such as Ghana, Ivory Coast
and Tanzania and others with a regulatory Commission overseeing the sub-sector.
The Managing Director, Swift Couriers
Limited, Mr. Toyin Olufade while also supporting the call for the speedy
passage of the Bill, disclosed that the sector has the capacity to create over
200,000 jobs noting that it has great benefit to the economy.
He stated that the Bill will help to end
unemployment in the country but that its impact on the economy is limited
because it has no government saying that stakeholders in sector have visited
the Communications Technology Minister, Mrs. Omobola Johnson but the visit did
not change the status of the sector.
He stated that NIPOST is failing because
Nigerians are no longer reading or writing adding that the sector needs an
enabling environment for it to thrive.
Commenting on the issues, Executive
Director, Moving Edge, a private courier operator, Mrs. Tolu Omamadaga, said
the sector needed infrastructure revolution, which only the passages of Bill
could guarantee saying that transport mode in the country is causing huge
losses to operators due to the present state of the roads across the country.
“We still obtain trade permit or emblem
from several sources even when our parcels are on transit, and if we fail to
meet our delivery time, it affects our business. And most local governments
across the country have formed the habit of damaging courier vehicles because
of one form of taxes or the other”, she said.
Reacting to the campaign for the passage
of the Bill, Managing Director, PTL Courier Limited, Ms. Lara Okuneye, said,
“We want to plead with the National Assembly to pass the Bill before the
expiration of their tenure. If we they have done that three years ago, we would
have started reaping the benefit by now.”
Another stakeholder, Managing Director,
TransRoyal Courier Limited, Mrs. Vivian Okeke blamed the proliferation of some
online marketing portal that now engage in courier business on the lack of a
credible regulatory commission.
She said that all of them have added courier
business to their core business saying that Ghana has a legal framework that is
helping the sector there to grow while the government is also giving support to
the operators.
Publicity Secretary of ANCO, Adeojo Toyin
said that lack of a credible regulatory commission was creating frustration for
the operators, saying that presently operators are worried about when Bill will
be passed into law.