World Customs SG visits Guyana
WCO Secretary-General, Ambassador Kunio Mikuriya, second from right, with GRA’s Commissioner-General Godfrey Statia, at right, and other officials
WCO Secretary-General, Ambassador Kunio Mikuriya, second from right, with GRA’s Commissioner-General Godfrey Statia, at right, and other officials

INTENSIVE interactions between the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA) and the World Customs Organisation (WCO) in recent months reached a high point in March when the Organisation’s Secretary-General, Ambassador Kunio Mikuriya, paid a two-day visit here.
Mr. Mikuriya, who has been serving as the WCO Secretary General since 2009, was in the company of Ms. Sharon Davies, Technical Attaché, Capacity Building Directorate, when he met with Commissioner-General of the GRA, Godfrey Statia, and senior officials in the Customs Excise and Trade Operations on March 19th and 20th.

World Customs Organisation (WCO) Secretary-General, Ambassador Kunio Mikuriya,second from left, and other officials

In a release, the GRA said the two sides discussed national and regional support to implement the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Trade Facilitation Agreement which Guyana ratified in November 2015, and Mr. Mikuriya was briefed on the Trade Facilitation status by the GRA.

At present the GRA has representation on Guyana’s National Committee on Trade Facilitation. Day two of the visit saw the Secretary-General being guided on a tour of key areas in Customs Operations such as the Entry Processing Unit, wharves and the Scanner operation site. He used the opportunity to interact with Customs Officers stationed at these points, giving them guidance on best practices.

Mr. Mikuriya also met participants in the ongoing Customs Officer III Training Programme where he delivered remarks and highlighted the importance of the Harmonised System (HS) training which was ongoing at the time. The HS was developed by the WCO to standardise tariff codes in accordance with the international best practices. Mr. Mikuriya indicated that HS combined with valuation best practices, rules of origin, trade facilitation and enforcement, constitute some of the core requirements for customs officers in any jurisdiction to effectively carry out their functions.

According to the release, the GRA was commended for some of the various customs moderinsation measures already implemented, as the secretary general pledged WCO’s continued technical support and future capacity building assistance to the GRA. In February this year, the WCO completed a Mercator Programme Scoping Mission to Guyana that identified key areas of customs operations where GRA could benefit from WCO’s assistance.

 

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