LJUBLJANA, May 4 (Hina) - Long lines of trucks which were waiting on Monday and Tuesday for customs control on the Croatian-Slovene border were the result of the introduction of a new computerised transit system (NCTS), which failed
several times in the first days of May, as well as of some other factors, the Slovene Customs Administration reported today.
LJUBLJANA, May 4 (Hina) - Long lines of trucks which were waiting on
Monday and Tuesday for customs control on the Croatian-Slovene border
were the result of the introduction of a new computerised transit
system (NCTS), which failed several times in the first days of May, as
well as of some other factors, the Slovene Customs Administration
reported today.#L#
Brane Greganovic, head of the office of Customs Administration chief
Franc Kosir, told Hina that the situation was better today and that
trucks were waiting to cross the border into Slovenia for four hours
on average.
The situation is slightly more difficult at the border crossing
Gruskovje-Macelj, with delays of five and more hours, because the
crossing still lacks the necessary infrastructure. The Slovene customs
service is somewhat surprised by the large number of freight vehicles
which have been passing this border crossing since May 1.
Slovenia got the new computer system, which is linked to customs
services throughout Europe, last year, after Poland, Hungary, Slovakia
and the Czech Republic, and it took some time to put it into operation
because of numerous new elements.
Greganovic said that cooperation with Croatian customs services on the
local level was more than good.
The head of the Slovene Customs Administration, Franc Kosir, who was
unavailable for comment, told the Slovene press that delays on the
border were caused by the new computer system which envisaged
electronic submission of customs documents, adjusted operation of
shipping agents and the customs administration, and observance of
customs and other regulations on the united European market.
Kosir said that the customs procedure was slow also because there was
not enough customs officers.
(Hina) rml