NDLEA nabs three wanted kingpins, intercepts drug consignment

Suspects

• Recovers cannabis in Ondo, Bayelsa, opioids in Adamawa

Operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have arrested three members of an organised criminal organisation after two months they were declared wanted.

The suspects fingered for being specialists in illicit drug trafficking across Nigeria, South Africa, Mozambique, Europe and America were declared wanted following the recent seizure of the single largest consignment of heroin at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Ikeja, Lagos.

Spokesperson for the agency, Femi Babafemi, who confirmed this in a statement yesterday, said a total of 51.90 kilogrammes of heroin were recovered from members of the drug cartel in an operation that began February 10, 2024 at the SAHCO Import Shed of the airport’s Cargo Terminal.


According to him, the consignment was concealed in 15 cartons of 2300-watt metal cutting machines, with no less than 45 blocks of the illicit substance weighing 49.70kg recovered from the equipment, while additional 2.2kg was seized at the syndicate’s warehouse in Ayobo area of Lagos.

“While the Agency has secured interim forfeiture court order on hotel, mansions, vehicles and funds traced to members of the syndicate after arresting four of them, a manhunt was also launched for others who went underground.

“The effort, however, paid off on Friday, April 19, when two of the wanted kingpins: Onyinyechi Irene Igbokwuputa and Frankline Uzochukwu were arrested in Lagos and Awka, Anambra State respectively.

“Another wanted member of the syndicate, Osita Emmanuel Obinna was equally nabbed in Lagos,” Babafemi said.

Similarly, the attempt by a suspect, Iheakara Ifeanyichukwu Festus, to export a drug consignment through terminal 2 of the Lagos airport to Muscat, Oman via Ethiopian airline flight on Thursday April 18, was thwarted by NDLEA officers.

When his luggage was searched, 20 big parcels of cannabis weighing 9.80kg were concealed in his bag.

In his statement, the suspect who lives in Muscat, Oman and returned to Nigeria on April 1, confessed he was hired to courier the drug with an agreement to get paid N1,200,000 upon successful delivery in Oman.


In Adamawa State, NDLEA operatives on Saturday, April 20, intercepted a Peugeot car driven by Dahiru Mohammed at Girei on his way to Mubi with 1,250,000 pills of opioids weighing 450kg.

The operatives had earlier intercepted along Ngurore -Yola road, a J5 bus marked AAA790XV loaded with motor spare parts from Onitsha, Anambra State, with consignments of Codeine Syrup and Tramadol concealed in-between the motor parts.

A follow up operation led to the arrest of the recipient, Jairus Nwanchor at Jambutu motor park.

Three suspects: Beriakuma Vivian Chinrdu, 40; Okpor Isaac, 68, and Daniel Onyeachom, 42, were on Saturday, April 20, arrested at Amarata,Yenagoa, Bayelsa State in connection with the seizure of 69 compressed blocks of cannabis weighing 36kg and concealed in a false compartment of a Toyota Picnic car marked MUS 711 DH they were travelling in.

This is even as NDLEA operatives in Imo State on Thursday , April 28, arrested Kingsley Omeje, 41, at Amajeke, Owerri, while he was taking delivery of 49 bottles of codeine syrup he ordered.

In Ondo State, NDLEA operatives raided the Oloro camp, Ogbese, Akure North Local Council where they arrested Linus Odogwu, 50, destroyed a total of 25,000 kilogrammes of cannabis on 10 hectares of farmland and recovered 89.5kg of the same substance.


Three other suspects: David Obungete Ekepenyoung, 22; Oluwaseun Folorunso,23 and Rabiu Musa, 32, were nabbed in other parts of the state in connection to different seizures totaling 77kg.

Similarly, Commands across the country intensified their War Against Drug Abuse (WADA) advocacy lectures.

Meanwhile, Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohammed Buba Marwa (Retd) has commended the officers and men of the MMIA, Adamawa, Bayelsa, Ondo and Imo Commands for their efforts in the past week.

He also applauded their counterparts across the country for intensifying their WADA advocacy lectures, thus creating parity between their drug supply reduction and demand reduction activities.

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