…After CGC’s media briefing on N10bn Pangolin scale***
Nigerian maritime industry watchers have pleaded with the Comptroller General of Customs, Col. Hameed Ali (rtd) to always wear handgloves while tinkering with seizures, particularly packaged seizures like pangolin scales.
The plea became vital shortly after Ali finished a media briefing, during which he touched pangolin scales in Lagos, saying that a kilo of the scales cost $3,000 in the market. Only few days afterwards, unconfirmed report linked pangolin with the dreaded Coronavirus.
“There is no way a head of parastatal addressing the media in respect of seizures, standing in front of such contraband, would not be tempted to touch it”, an importer, Bolutife Egbewole stated, stressing the need for caution by everyone in such positions, in future.
“It is not about whether he washed his hand with soap or not, it is about fulfilling all righteousness”, he further said, wondering if the world was actually moving into an era of competing or competitive infections, trying to take lives.
Speaking in the same vein, another stakeholder who spoke on condition of anonymity, asked what Government was going to do now, with the seized pangolin scales.

Public Relations Officer of NCS, Mr. Joseph Attah
“Okay, we have impounded a N10 billion worth of scales, because it is a prohibited item; so, what next?
Also read: Customs impounds pangolin scales worth N10.26bn in Lagos
“Are we going to destroy it just like that, when the nation needs every dime it can touch? Or are we going to take it to the same Chinese black market, and sell it?” she asked.
She also pleaded with Ali to henceforth wear gloves, adding that Coronavirus started just with one person, and has since gone viral.
Meanwhile, the Maritime First can authoritative indicate, that though the CGC touched the pangolin scales, he did not touch his face with the same area of hand.
Though Ali also noted that a kilo of the product fetches $3,000 in the market, he however, was not too sure, whether Nigeria has pangolin or not.
“What we have here… it’s a surprise, there are 13 bags of this and the total value of this is N10.26 billion.
“This shows you the amount of pressure, the amount of tenacity on the side of the smugglers.
“I don’t think we have pangolin in Nigeria, even if we have, it will be very few”, he explained further.