Pubdate: Wed, 03 Mar 2004 Source: This Day (Nigeria) Copyright: 2004 This Day. Contact: http://www.thisdayonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2870 Author: Nneoma Ukeje-Eloagu 'NIGERIA STILL MAJOR DRUG TRANSIT COUNTRY' The United States Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs yesterday released its annual report in which Nigeria is described as "a major drug-transit country" with criminal elements operating global trafficking/criminal networks around the world. According to the Department of State's International Narcotics Control Strategy Report (INCSR) prepared in accordance with a489 of the U.S. Foreign Assistance Act (FAA), "Nigeria is a major staging point for Southeast and Southwest Asian heroin smuggled to Europe and the United States and for South American cocaine trafficked to Europe." The INCSR provides the factual basis for the Presidential narcotics certification determinations for major drug-producing and/or drug-transit countries required under FAA a490. The law requires that fifty percent of certain kinds of assistance be withheld from all such countries, required to be identified and reported to Congress by the President by November 1 of each year, pending the President's March 1 certification determinations. If a country is not certified, most foreign assistance is cut off and the United States is required to vote against funding by six multilateral development banks to that country. In according a status to Nigeria, the report states that "Nigeria does not produce precursor chemicals or drugs that have a significant effect on the United States but is a major drug-transit country." It further noted that "Nigerian drug organizations are also heavily involved in corollary criminal activities such as document fabrication, illegal immigration, and financial fraud." Seizures of hard drugs in 2003 were described as "modest," with cocaine and heroin totaling 130 kilograms and 70 kilograms respectively and no one seizure exceeded 15 kilograms. The Nigerian Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEAD) is reported to have seized more than 937 kilograms of synthetic drugs and more than 530,000 kilograms of cannabis. The successes of some NDLEA State Commands were also reported, "with one State arresting 58 persons and seizing 1,700 kilograms of cannabis, 10 kilograms of cocaine and 9 kilograms of heroin between September and November 2003." NDLEA achieved limited success in combating the various elements of the drug trade during 2003.On the whole however, NDLEA efforts with large scale traffickers was noted to be less effective than efforts at "street pushers." Cannabis is listed as the only illicit drug produced in large quantities in Nigeria and is cultivated in all 36 states with Major cultivation taking place in central and northern Nigeria and in the Delta and Ondo states in the south. The report however noted that "to date, there is no evidence of significant marijuana imports from Nigeria into the United States." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh