Pubdate: Thu, 16 Dec 2004 Source: This Day (Nigeria) Copyright: 2004 This Day. Contact: http://www.thisdayonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2870 Author: Godwin Haruna DIED FIGHTING THE DRUG WAR LAGOS -- For the cause of the fatherland, they enlisted into the service at different points. However, they were united by one vision and that was to rid Nigeria of the drug menace working painstakingly under the aegis of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA). Buoyed up by the expanded vision of their leader, the patriots, five in number, toiled to sanitise Nigeria, but they were felled in the cause of this duty. Mukaila Usman Sanchi, Hassan Umar, Isaiah Danjuma Maje, Yakubu Ahmed Mohammed and Aina Gbadebo Olayiwola were all operatives of the NDLEA, who paid the supreme sacrifice in their zeal to cleanse the society. The officers were mowed down in cold blood by the last vestiges of the clan they were trying to rid society of. The blacklegs of society dealt their cruel blow on the operatives in their prime - all of them were in their thirties, in a gruesome manner in Kano. Last Monday, the management of the Agency organised a colourful memorial parade in honour of the gallant officers. From far and near, the diplomatic corps, network of non-governmental organisations (NGOs), the media, the deceased families and a host of other dignitaries converged at the NDLEA headquarters to pay their last respects to the deceased. In a solemn, ceremony, the fallen officers' comrades moved the caskets one after another, to the venue. The Police band provided the dirges. Many officers and sympathizers could not hold back tears when caskets were being arranged for wreaths to be laid. Tears flowed freely against the background that all the five were young with a lot of promise. The chief mourner and helmsman of the NDLEA Alhaji Bello Lafiaji was overwhelmed with emotion when he got up to speak. His voice almost failed him close to the end of his speech. Lafiaji noted that it was a most difficult challenge for any parent to bury his child. "It is difficult, emotionally, psychologically, physically and otherwise. So, you can imagine my state of mind right now. I am sad and at the same time very angry", he said. He said he was sad because the young operatives, do not deserve to die the way they did. He explained that the gallant officers had set about their duties to their fatherland on the fateful day without premonition of death. They had hoped, he said, to bring one more merchant of death to book. In spite of the dangers and the inconvenience of work at such hours, he said they did not complain. The chairman stated that they were fired by their patriotic zeal to go ahead with what they had to do, but it was rather unfortunate they did not come back alive. Continuing, he said: "I am angry because the very community that the personnel of this agency give their time and lives to serve and protect from the ravages of drugs is the same community that has snuffed out the lives of the young operatives. It should not have happened. But since it has happened we must reflect on it and learn the necessary lessons that would ensure it never happens again", Lafiaji declared. In an emotion-laden voice, he stressed that NDLEA was only the arrow head of the fight against drug trafficking and enjoined all members of the society to join the agency in curbing the drug menace. "We will rise from our mournful moods and take the fight to the drug barons, wherever they may be across the length and breadth of this country and give them the hell they deserve", he said. On the slain officers, he noted: "Our sincerest tears cannot bring them back. Our most magnanimous generosity to their families cannot be a substitute for them. But, we will never forget them, we will use the lesson of their deaths to prevent such heartless murders". Quoting Shakespeare in the play Macbeth, Lafiaji noted that the perpetrators have murdered sleep and shall find no more sleep. He promised to nab those behind the dastardly act. "We need all and sundry. We need your cooperation in volunteering information; we need your cooperation in assistance with logistics; above all, we need your understanding and realization that the drug addicts and the gullible children NDLEA is trying to save are your people. Help rendered to NDLEA is help rendered to your community. Similarly, murdering NDLEA operatives is akin to murdering the community because our primary objective is the well-being of the community", he said. In his tribute to the fallen heroes, he reiterated that they would not die in vain. "The lesson of your passage and the perpetual requiem for you shall be a professionally smarter and tougher NDLEA. While we mourn you, may your gentle souls rest in perfect peace, reassured that dying the way you did, has pumped up the adrenaline in us and things shall never be the same again", he added. Lafiaji promised to do the utmost best to ensure that the families of the deceased do not suffer much deprivation. In a move many considered as unprecedented for a government agency, the chairman handed over cheques to all the representatives of the families present on the occasion. He also awarded the fallen officers Post Humous Award for Excellence and Patriotism. For their children, he promised them automatic employment in the agency when they come of age and are desirous of threading their fathers' professional footsteps. He used the occasion to solicit the assistance of all collaborators both locally and internationally to increase the level of their partnership in order to win the war on drug trafficking. Also speaking at the memorial, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Narcotics and Financial Crimes, Alhaji Lawal Shuaibu, stated that the loss of any officer was regrettable, especially, when it is this brutal and out of the wickedness of criminals. "The case we have on our hands is a sad reminder of the fact that the drug problem is real and that the perpetrators are getting increasingly merciless, comparable to what obtains in advanced countries where drug barons deploy the most dangerous weapons of war. We cannot afford to get to that level which is why all hands must be on deck so that we must stop them before they stop us, Shuaibu, who was represented stated. He said the act was not only an assault on the officers and NDLEA, but on the generality of Nigerians and mankind as a whole. He lauded the efforts of Lafiaji to contain the menace of drugs since his assumption of office. "He has taken training to greater heights, ensuring that officers face their jobs with tact and singleness of minds through motivation and improved working condition. In the last four years we can attest that this is the first major casualty, which lends credence to all these efforts at repositioning the agency for better results. But casualty has remained a second nature to war. As such, tried as any body could, it is most difficult to attain one hundred per cent reduction in death in action; especially in a war situation that fighting drugs entails", he said. Shuaibu reiterated the commitment of the Senate Committee on Narcotic Drugs and Financial Crimes, in collaboration with faint counterpart of the lower house, to leave no stone unturned until the killers are fished out and brought to book. He said part of the Senate Committee's resolve is to make provision in the 2005 budget to enable the NDLEA procure more arms and be able to effectively counter similar attacks in the future. He condemned criminals who resort to killing law enforcement agents and declared that they would face the full wrath of the law. The colourful ceremony was well attended by international collaborators and top government officials. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl