ISPS: US Coast Guard Tasks Nigeria on Vigilance, Consistency

…As Dakuku says Nigeria has moved from implementation to enforcement***

The United States Coast Guard has tasked the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), on the need for greater vigilance in terms of securing access to areas designated as International Ship and Port-Facilities Security (ISPS) zones with the nation’sports.

The observation was made Thursday in Lagos by a visiting coast guard team led by Lt Commander Janna Ott, while making verbal assessment of their in terms of their on-the- spot findings. The delegation was in Nigeria to inspect facilities and ports.

“It’s very important that you know in your port facilities who is gaining access and (that) they are authorised to be there before they go through those gates of the ISPS zone,” Ott stated.

Ott, a representative of the US Coast Guard in International Port Security Programme however also found the Nigerian team worthy and praised them for steps already taken to improve the country’s compliance with the International Ship and Port Security (ISPS) code.

“You do have a really great team here. They were very helpful.

“I thank them for their frank and open discussion in allowing us to give them our observations. Hopefully, they can take whatever we have given them to heart and start working on them right away”, she told the NIMASA staff, even as she chastised them for perceived discretional or inconsistent use of power, in the zones. 

“You also need to be consistent with the proficiencies ofall the security personnel in holding people accountable that are coming

through those port facilities. We already had a very good discussion with NIMASA,” she added.

Responding, the Director General of NIMASA, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, said the country had made significant progress in addressing the issue of access control around the port areas. 

Dr. Dakuku Peterside, NIMASA DG

Dakuku, who spoke through NIMASA’s Executive Director,Finance and Administration, Bashir Jamoh, said, “The issue of access control is one of the paramount areas. The access road, access control, those are very important areas.

“Similarly, on access control, we just introduced stickers to the ports. We started implementing it early this month.”

He said the federal government had taken measures in partnership with the private sector to ensure that all port facilities in Nigeria were easily accessed.

The DG said NIMASA had recorded steady progress in its implementation of the ISPS Code, stressing that Nigeria has moved from implementation to enforcement.

He told the US Coast Guard team, “The issues you mentioned, we are dealing with them. One of the things we have introduced is training. We are aware that some of the facilities have these issues. Right now, most of them are going into biometric access control, which you observed in some of the terminals, like MRS, Five Star Logistics, etc.

“We would do more in training and continuous visit to these facilities and create better awareness for them to implement effective access control strategies. We will be consistent in the things we do because we have our executive management’s buy-in and support to do our job.

“In fact, we have gone from just implementation to enforcement, where after several engagements and if facilities do not comply with those required standards, we start to sanction them and even get them shut down.”

The United States Coast Guard is Nigeria’s peer review partner towards ISIS Code implementation compliance; and they regularly visit Nigeria to monitor implementation of the ISPS in Nigeria.

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