Pubdate: Sat, 28 Jun 2008 Source: Leadership Nigeria (Nigeria) Copyright: 2008 Leadership Newspapers Group Limited Contact: http://www.leadershipnigeria.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4706 Author: Joshua Ojo Uma COMBATING DRUG TRAFFICKING AND ABUSE The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), which was established to combat drug trafficking and abuse, has through the years, put in relentless efforts at ensuring that the Nigerian ports and other various points through which illicit drugs are smuggled in and out of the country are secure. Their efforts have paid off and received wide acceptance and acknowledgement by the international community, thereby creating avenues for partnership with similar agencies abroad, the most recent and fruitful being the partnership between the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and the United States government through its ambassador to Nigeria, Mrs Robin Sanders. The American envoy, on behalf of her government, donated full body scanning machines to be stationed in the international airports in Lagos, Kano, Abuja and Port Harcourt, and made the provision of networks security training and orientation for the officers at the various airport commands. The equipment and skills acquired by officers of the agency through the training and orientation, played major roles in the outstanding drug seizures and arrests of drug traffickers and the cracking down on drug cartel and networks. Worth mentioning is that within seven days after a body scanning machine was commissioned at the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport (NAIA) command of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), five suspected drug traffickers were detected by the machine for attempting to smuggle narcotics through the airport. The five suspects were nabbed during the outward screening of passengers on a KLM flight on April 3, 2008. The Abuja airport commander of the agency, Alhaji Hamza Umar, while commenting on the command's scorecard in the first quarter of the year, disclosed that more drug traffickers would be arrested with the aid of the body scanning machine. "The first screening we carried out with the body scanner resulted in the arrest of five suspected drug traffickers on a single flight," Alhaji Hamza said. This is a clear signal that whoever carries drugs to this airport is only presenting him or herself for arrest and prosecution. Lamentable is the involvement of healthy young men and women in this ignoble trade. The suspects arrested at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA), as observed by the airport commander, are between the ages of 29 and 46, which happens to be the prime age for productivity. In his words: "The ugly trend where young people engage in drug trafficking rather than be gainfully employed calls for serious concern." In line with this call, the United States government, also believing that drug trafficking and abuse is a global menace which requires a global approach, has resolved to spread its tentacles in the fight by partnering with other nations like Nigeria, a partnership which has been quite fruitful, going by the number of arrests so far and the number of drug seizures, made possible by the equipment and human resource development provided by the US. However, the gloomy portrait painted by drug trafficking and other related offences to the international community tends to sabotage the good fight of the agency. Recently, the honourable chairman/chief executive of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Alhjai Ahmadu Giade, while responding to the arrest of six suspected Nigerian drug traffickers living in other countries in the month of April, 2008 in Lagos, urged Nigerians to always protect and promote the image of the country by avoiding drug trafficking and other criminal acts. According to Giade, "Every Nigerian must assume the status of an ambassador and be genuinely excited in projecting the country in good light at all times". The arrested suspects include: Izeagba Donatus Okwuchukwu, 43, who was arrested during the routine check on passengers on a KLM flight from Lagos to Amsterdam. He ingested 78 wraps of narcotics; Egharevba Colins, 30, who lives in Madrid, Spain. He ingested 68 wraps of cocaine weighing 1.138 kilogrammes; Andrew Okey Eze, 36, who lives in Torino, Italy and was found to have ingested 95 wraps of cocaine on his way to Milan. Others are Maduka Sunday Chinedu, 35, who lives in Cotonou. He was found to have ingested 84 wraps of cocaine on his way to Germany; Ngwu Whiteman Gibson, a 48-year old father of three who lives in Bassano, Italy. He ingested 93 wraps of cocaine, weighing 1.568 kilogrammes, and Alugwo Kingsley Uka, 33, who was arrested on his way to Belgium with 73 wraps of hard drugs in his stomach. The agency took the war against drug trafficking further when it enjoined courier houses to prevent the use of their organisations in illicit drug trafficking, by collaborating with the agency in the control of illegal trafficking. The call for the collaboration came towards the end of April, during a workshop on operator – government agency interface in the courier business in Lagos. The agency, through its director-general/secretary, Otunba Lanre Ipinmisho, stated that, "Courier companies are expected by law to take reasonable precaution in the courses of their operations to check obnoxious drug trade." Furthermore, Ipinmisho cited section 16 of the NDLEA Act, which stipulates that it shall be the duty of every commercial carrier to take reasonable precaution to ensure that its means of transport is not used in committing drug offences under the act. Such precaution, as referred to by the act, includes the training of personnel to identify suspicious consignments and persons, promotion of integrity of their personnel, submission of cargo manifest in advance to the agency, use of tamper-resistant, individually veritable seals or parcels/containers, and reporting to the agency all suspicious circumstances at the earliest opportunity. In addition, the courier houses are expected to comply with appropriate security measures to prevent unauthorised cargo in its means of transportation. The need to establish a cordial relationship between courier houses and the agency in the control of drug trafficking was also emphasised by the director-general/secretary of the agency. According to him, "The need has become imperative, due to the fact that drug barons have diversified their subterfuge by the use of courier houses," a reason why the NDLEA in 1996 under its Directorate of Investigation, created a specialised unit called the Postal Intelligence Assignment, which is now known as Special Intelligence Assignment (SIA), to check drug trafficking at the courier houses. The SIA, since its establishment, has made several seizures of drugs and arrests of suspected drug traffickers. Just in January 28, 2008, the unit intercepted 2 kilogrammes of cannabis originating from Abia State and meant for delivery in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia. Similarly, 500 grammes of cocaine concealed in cell phone chargers were also discovered in 2007. Notably, the agency's watchfulness from 2007 till date has led to the seizure of a total of 3.684 kilogrammes of cocaine, 25.8 kilogrammes of cannabis and 20 kilogrammes of psychotropic substances that were smuggled through the courier houses. Some modes of concealment uncovered in the process include hard cover books, picture frames, photo albums, sculptures, computer components, electronics spare parts, textile materials, etc. The agency has shown great courage and determination in its fight against drug trafficking and abuse between 2006 and the present, during which period, over 12,663 suspected drug dealers were arrested and the seizure of over 418.8 metric tonnes of various hard drug made. The agency still has to fasten its belt though and take this campaign against narcotics to the grassroots, incorporating enlightenment progammes into their scheme to cover schools, both at primary, secondary and higher institutions. It is also important that the fight against drug trafficking be taken to major hotels, resorts, and various barracks as perpetrators of such vice do their illegal transactions in the above mentioned places. Finally, the government should enact stiffer penalties for offenders, so as to discourage them and intending offenders from the disgraceful trade. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart