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Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies - Politics - Nairaland

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Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by Parachoko: 6:14am On Jun 17, 2023

Sitting on top of a yellow jerry can of fuel, Jeannine waits for customers on a sidewalk in Benin’s economic capital Cotonou, but business is slow.

The motorbikes and cars she normally supplies are no longer stopping to stock up on her cheap gasoline, which is smuggled in from neighbouring Nigeria.

Since Nigeria’s new president Bola Ahmed Tinubu abruptly ended his country’s long-standing subsidy on petrol two weeks ago, prices of black market fuel over the border in Benin have also doubled.

“Since this morning, barely five people have stopped,” said Jeanine. “Everyone prefers to go to the petrol station now.”

Two weeks ago, a litre of “Kpayo”, the smuggled gasoline sold on the side of Beninese roads, doubled from 350 to 700 CFA francs (0.5 to 1 euro). That is now higher than the petrol in service stations at the market price of around 650 CFA a litre.


In Nigeria, fuel prices have also tripled since Tinubu ended the subsidies, with food, transport and power prices feeling the knock-on effect.

Ending the subsidy was the first measure taken by Tinubu, who sees the subsidies as unsustainable financial waste costing the state billions of dollars a year, and allowing massive smuggling of subsidised gasoline to neighbouring countries.

“Why should we (…) feed the smugglers and be the Santa Claus of neighbouring countries,” Tinubu said last week, justifying the decision, which has been unpopular in Nigeria.


For decades, Nigeria’s low-cost gasoline has been transported illegally by road to its neighbours, primarily Benin, where it is resold on the black market by a multitude of informal sellers.

“You know, this fuel helps feed thousands of people in Benin,” said Jeannine, a 48-year-old widow with five children, who says she does not have savings “to start a new business”.

The scale of the trafficking is such that the price of taxi fares has almost doubled in Cotonou. In Cameroon, another neighbour of Nigeria, several motorcycle taxi unions have gone on strike in protest.


“Is it because the border is closed?” asks the driver who has never heard of Nigerian subsidies.

“We’re going to pray to God that it goes down,” said the 46-year-old man, who says he was forced to cut corn rations for his children when business slowed
.

A few kilometres away, Nicolas Evedjere is happy enough. The gas station manager has never sold as much as in recent days.

“We had to close this morning, because we had nothing left to sell, our clients have multiplied by ten,” he said smiling while adding he is sad “to see brothers suffer”.

Suppliers had not anticipated such an explosion in demand, he said.

In front of gas stations that still have fuel to sell, long queues are now visible at peak times.

This is good news for the Beninese State, which hopes to increase its tax revenue, as informal sellers do not pay tax.

“In recent years, the Beninese government has encouraged the development of service stations in the country to reduce the importance of contraband gasoline on the market,” Beninese government spokesman Wilfried Houngbedji told AFP.

“If we hadn’t done this, we would currently be facing serious shortages,” he said.



The subsidy episode has once again illustrated Benin’s steep dependence on its Nigerian neighbour, a West African giant with 215 million inhabitants, the continent’s largest economy and one of Africa’s top oil producers.

Nigeria’s border with Benin was closed off overnight in 2019 by former Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, a shutdown which lasted 18 months and asphyxiated the Beninese economy.

Whether coincidence or not, Beninese President Patrice Talon recently dismissed his foreign affairs minister, replacing him with Shegun Bakari, a Beninese entrepreneur who is of the same Yoruba ethnicity as Tinubu, and who observers say is “close” to his inner circle.

At the Benin border post of Seme-Krake, on the Atlantic coast, the usual hustle of currency traders, sellers, transporters and small traders involved in gasoline trafficking may have slowed, but another activity persists.

Rice imports are officially banned in Nigeria, which is trying to encourage local production.

But on the Nigerian side, past the customs checkpoints, a multitude of cars, their trunks filled with bags of rice arriving from the port of Cotonou in Benin, are unloaded in plain sight and passed into new vehicles for transport into Nigeria.


https://guardian.ng/news/benin-feels-the-pinch-as-neighbouring-nigeria-ends-fuel-subsidies/

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by Babzrockman: 6:19am On Jun 17, 2023
Everyone is feeling it oo. But thank God subsidy is gone. Fuel scarcity is gone as well

3 Likes

Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by adebayo201: 6:25am On Jun 17, 2023
It's all about cause and effect.

Removal of fuel subsidy has it own cause and we've to feel the effects. Interestingly, we're humans, we will adjust.

But you see these our neighboring countries have enjoyed from Nigeria and they should be grateful.

5 Likes

Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by Acekidc4(m): 6:32am On Jun 17, 2023
Dem be Thief Na??

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by tollyboy5(m): 6:40am On Jun 17, 2023
Stop repeating what everyone knows.

Sanwo style. naso we BEEN dey see blueline rail pictures everywhere!
Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by marlow1962(m): 7:19am On Jun 17, 2023
Mabizeka:
No one feels it more than ronu people
Lmao, Omo my bro, do you have the video? I want to watch it, while smoking my kolos and laugh so hard at their foolishness and stupidity.

1 Like

Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by marlow1962(m): 7:21am On Jun 17, 2023
adebayo201:
It's all about cause and effect.

Removal of fuel subsidy has it own cause and we've to feel the effects. Interestingly, we're humans, we will adjust.

But you see these our neighboring countries have enjoyed from Nigeria and they should be grateful.
Did you guys say you will adjust the time Jonathan was talking about removing fuel subsidy? The time Nigeria was better and working. It's now everything is in shambles you want to adjust.
Mtchew
Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by Ofunaofu: 7:34am On Jun 17, 2023
Babzrockman:
Everyone is feeling it oo. But thank God subsidy is gone. Fuel scarcity is gone as well

The former might be true but the bolded in not true
Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by SmartPolician: 8:02am On Jun 17, 2023
These media guys should rest - we have passed this stage.

Instead, the media should be asking what palliatives Tinubu is bringing on board to cushion the effects of subsidy removal.

Buying something for less than #200 but suddenly buying it for #500 is a lot of sacrifice.
Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by helinues: 8:11am On Jun 17, 2023
Dem never see shumting

The era of smuggling already paid subsidy fuel to the neighboring countries don over

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by inoki247: 8:18am On Jun 17, 2023
Lol
Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by Simdyofficial(f): 9:40am On Jun 17, 2023
angry
Re: Benin Feels The Pinch As Neighbouring Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies by sixtuso(m): 10:55am On Jun 17, 2023
Since Tinubu assume the presidency I only turn on my Gen. Once. And it didn't take long they brought light back. I now feel less concerned to charge my phone when the battery is bellows 50% because I trust the PHCN. Is it my Gass my Wife have not been using it because of constant electricity. But the bill no be here but I like it. Am not longer paying for darkness. This month alone #23k plus It is well.

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Tell Niger Coupists To Go Bed With Their Eyes Closed / Seun Osewa Should Pray That I Don't Become President / At This Point Do You Think Tinubu Is Thr Right Man For The Presidency

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