CAR Rebuilds Customs with WCO Aid Postcrisis

With WCO support, the Central African Republic Customs has launched post-crisis reforms aimed at building institutional capacity, compliance enforcement, trade facilitation, and international cooperation through strategic planning and recovery programs. The reforms prioritize border security and utilize data analysis to quantify their impact. These efforts contribute to national economic development and security assurance.
CAR Rebuilds Customs with WCO Aid Postcrisis

Imagine a national customs system that, after years of turmoil, resembles a weathered giant ship in desperate need of repair before it can set sail again. This is precisely the situation facing the Central African Republic's customs administration. With support from the World Customs Organization (WCO), the country is working to emerge from the shadows of past crises through an ambitious reform program—not merely a patchwork fix, but a complete rebirth.

Diagnosing the Current State of CAR's Customs

From January 16-26, 2017, at the request of the Central African Republic's Customs Administration, the WCO dispatched an expert team to Bangui to conduct a thorough assessment. The team comprised:

  • A Côte d'Ivoire customs modernization expert
  • A Mali customs specialist trained under the African Union-funded Mercator Program
  • A WCO security research expert

Their primary objectives were:

  • Situation Analysis: Deep assessment of current customs operations to identify bottlenecks and challenges
  • Strategic Planning: Development of a 2017-2019 strategic plan to guide future development

The findings revealed alarming stagnation. Due to prolonged sociopolitical crises, CAR's customs administration had made virtually no substantive progress since the 2008 needs assessment phase. While minor achievements existed, previous recommendations from the WCO and partners remained largely unimplemented, indicating significant systemic resistance requiring robust intervention.

Dual-Track Reform Strategy

To address these challenges, WCO experts collaborated with CAR's customs reform team to develop a two-pronged approach:

  • Strategic Planning: Identification of priority areas and drafting of a three-year strategic plan (2017-2019) to provide a comprehensive modernization framework
  • Recovery Plan: Development of immediate and medium-term projects to address urgent operational issues while laying foundations for future development

The WCO expressed optimism about reform prospects and reaffirmed continued support through technical assistance, training, and resources.

Special Focus: Border Security Initiatives

Concurrently, WCO research missions in CAR focused on two critical security aspects:

  • Capacity Building: Leveraging WCO's conflict and post-conflict experience to support operational strengthening
  • Border Security Analysis: Field assessment of northwestern border regions under the "Sécurité Par Collaboration ++" security project involving Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon, and CAR

Strategic Plan Framework

While specific plan details weren't disclosed, analysis suggests four key reform domains:

1. Institutional Capacity Building

Structural optimization, human resource modernization, and IT infrastructure upgrades to create professional, efficient operations.

2. Compliance & Enforcement

Enhanced risk management, intelligence capabilities, and operational capacity to combat smuggling and tax evasion.

3. Trade Facilitation

Streamlined clearance processes, increased transparency, and stakeholder collaboration to reduce trade barriers.

4. International Cooperation

Strengthened regional partnerships, engagement with international organizations, and adoption of global standards.

Recovery Plan Components

Immediate action items likely include:

  • Critical equipment procurement (scanners, vehicles, communications)
  • Accelerated staff training programs
  • Information system rehabilitation
  • Border post infrastructure improvements
  • Public awareness campaigns

Measuring Reform Success

Key performance indicators for monitoring progress include:

  • Clearance processing times
  • Revenue collection figures
  • Contraband interception rates
  • Trade volume statistics
  • Stakeholder satisfaction metrics

These quantitative measures will enable data-driven adjustments to ensure reform objectives are met.

Prospects for CAR's Customs Future

The path forward remains challenging amid political instability, economic constraints, and security threats. However, with WCO support and comprehensive strategic planning, CAR's customs administration appears positioned for meaningful transformation—a critical step toward national economic recovery and security stabilization.