Friday, May 22, 2026

Massive Drug Bust: Nigeria Smashes Meth Cartel and Captures Kingpin

Nigeria's anti-drug agency said it had dismantled a methamphetamine syndicate in the largest seizure of ​its kind in the country, seizing drugs and chemicals ‌worth about $363 million and arresting 10 suspects, including three Mexicans.

The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency said late on Wednesday that coordinated raids on ​a farm in Ogun state and linked properties ​in Lagos state, southwest Nigeria, uncovered an industrial-scale clandestine ⁠laboratory and yielded 2.4 tons of methamphetamine and chemical materials.

NDLEA ​chief Mohamed Buba Marwa said the operation, carried out over ​48 hours after months of intelligence work, exposed a network importing foreign "technical expertise" to produce drugs locally.

Seven suspects, including three Mexicans described as ​meth "cooks", were arrested at the farm used as a lab ​in Ogun state's Abidagba forest, while the alleged mastermind, Anochili Innocent, a ‌Nigerian, ⁠was detained at his Lagos residence. Follow-up operations brought total arrests to 10, the agency said.

The agency said the scale of the haul, equivalent to millions of street doses, highlighted ​a shift by ​drug cartels ⁠towards setting up production bases in Nigeria.

The crackdown underscores Nigeria's growing role as both a ​transit and manufacturing hub in the global illegal ​drugs ⁠trade.

Illegal trade has been growing in Nigeria and West Africa, where porous borders allow cartels to expand logistics networks and links ⁠to ​Latin American trafficking groups.

Marwa said the agency ​will step up its crackdown on local and transnational networks across the ​country.

By Camillus Eboh, Reuters

Chinese investors may take control of Nigeria’s refineries in massive NNPC shake-up

Nigeria may soon hand majority control of two of its most strategic oil assets to Chinese investors as the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited pushes a new plan to revive the country’s troubled refineries after years of failed rehabilitation efforts.

The proposal, which insiders say is being modelled on the successful Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas structure, could see Chinese firms acquire up to 51 per cent of the equity in the Port Harcourt and Warri refineries under a long-term technical and commercial partnership with NNPC.

The development marks one of the most significant shifts yet in Nigeria’s downstream petroleum sector and could deepen China’s influence in Africa’s largest oil-producing economy at a time when the country is struggling to end decades of refinery inefficiency, fuel imports, and mounting public frustration.

The proposed arrangement emerged after NNPC signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Chinese firms Sanjiang Chemical Company Limited and Xinganchen (Fuzhou) Industrial Park Operation and Management Co., Ltd. during a meeting in Jiaxing City, China, on April 30, 2026.

The agreement was signed by NNPC Group Chief Executive Officer, Bayo Ojulari, alongside the chairman of Sanjiang Chemical Company, Guan Jianzhong, and the chairman of Xinganchen Industrial Park Operation and Management Co., Ltd, Bill Bi.

Although officially described as a “potential technical equity partnership,” findings indicate the discussions go far beyond a traditional refinery rehabilitation contract.


NNPC adopts NLNG-style model

According to The Punch, sources familiar with the negotiations said the framework under consideration resembles the ownership structure of Nigeria LNG Limited, in which investors hold a majority stake, participate in governance, and remain actively involved in operations over the long term.

Under the proposed structure, the Chinese firms would not only help complete outstanding engineering and rehabilitation work at the Port Harcourt and Warri refineries, but could also become strategic co-owners with operational responsibilities tied directly to profitability and performance.

For years, Nigeria has spent billions of naira attempting to restore its state-owned refineries with little success. Despite repeated rehabilitation announcements, the facilities have continued to operate below expectations, forcing Africa’s top crude producer to depend heavily on imported refined petroleum products.

Industry analysts say the latest move suggests growing concerns within NNPC that previous refinery repair arrangements may not be sustainable without technically competent investors with financial stakes in the assets.

According to officials familiar with the agreement, the partnership would cover refinery operations and maintenance services to improve efficiency, reliability, and safety standards, while expanding refining capacity and producing cleaner fuels.

The discussions also include plans for petrochemical integration and gas-based industrial projects around the refinery complexes, potentially transforming the facilities into broader industrial hubs rather than standalone refineries.

“The scope includes capacity expansion, yield optimisation, petrochemical integration, and compliance with clean fuel standards, alongside exploration of gas-based industrial projects in Nigeria,” an NNPC official familiar with the discussions said.

Speaking after the signing ceremony, Ojulari described the agreement as a major milestone following months of negotiations between both parties.

“All parties recognise mutually beneficial opportunities for the development and long-term sustainable profitability of NNPC’s refining assets in Nigeria and the collective weight required for success,” he said.

He added that the partnership represents an important step toward identifying technical equity partners capable of restarting and expanding the country’s struggling refineries.

However, officials stressed that the agreement remains non-binding and subject to extensive technical, financial, operational, legal, and regulatory due diligence before any final commercial arrangement can be executed.

The Executive Secretary of the Major Energies Marketers Association of Nigeria, Clement Isong, said the model could help solve longstanding operational inefficiencies that have plagued Nigeria’s refining sector for decades.

According to him, the critical difference in the new arrangement is that the Chinese partners would become equity holders rather than ordinary contractors, giving them stronger incentives to ensure the facilities work efficiently and profitably.

“This is an innovative way of getting the assets to work in an efficient and sustainable way. The third party they have brought is taking equity. He’s a part-owner of the refinery and so would want the refinery to work so he can get returns on his investment,” Isong said.

The Port Harcourt refinery rehabilitation project was previously awarded to Italian engineering company Maire Tecnimont, while separate rehabilitation work had also commenced at the Warri refinery.

If the talks progress into binding agreements, the deal could significantly reshape Nigeria’s downstream oil industry while expanding Chinese participation in the country’s refining, petrochemical, and gas sectors.

By Segun Adeyemi, Business Insider Africa

With ‘Clarissa,’ Two Nigerian Brothers Are Forging an Arthouse Alternative to Nollywood

Twin brothers Chuko Esiri and Arie Esiri grew up in Nigeria but left the country for their education, and until recently, both seemed headed toward careers abroad. The brothers — now pioneers of a new wave of Nigerian arthouse cinema — premiered their acclaimed new filmClarissa” at the Cannes Film Festival and stopped by the American Pavilion, presented by IndieWire, to discuss how writing their 2020 debut feature “Eyimofe” became a turning point in their careers.

“The genesis of — the kernel that led to — the writing of the first feature was I had moved from New York back to Nigeria to do my National Youth Service,” said Chuko. “My first instinct was to go back to New York. It’s a great city, but the longer I stayed at home, the more I was rediscovering and falling in love with [Nigeria], wanting to tell a story of [it], learning eventually that maybe the thing you want is in front of you, no matter how challenging or difficult it may seem.”

Nigeria is not just the setting for “Eyimofe” and “Clarissa,” but the films’ subject. One of the unifying threads across both films — from the wealthy social circles of “Clarissa,” loosely adapted from “Mrs. Dalloway,” to the poverty-stricken characters of “Eyimofe” — is how deeply their lives are shaped by Nigerian history and politics. The country has undergone a turbulent three decades since transitioning to democracy after years of successive military coups.

“We say often [Nigerians] talk about politics like the British talk about the weather,” said Arie. “I think that speaks to the consideration of Nigeria as a place, how we are evolving as a society, and it’s hard to remove ourselves from that dialogue.”

Nigeria, of course, has a successful film business known as Nollywood, which pumps out thousands of films a year. Most are for the direct-to-streaming market and defined by their brisk pacing and blending of comedy and religion into heightened melodramas, all of which are an escape from the realities of modern-day Nigerian society. It is the antithesis of the neorealistic instincts of the Esiri brothers, who never contemplated a filmmaking career in their home country.

“I’m on the side of the fence that sees Nollywood as a genre and not an industry, because a healthy industry should be welcoming, it should encompass every type of filmmaker, and every type of story,” said Arie. “I can’t speak to other Nigerian filmmakers, but I think Nollywood has different concerns, which are very liberating in many ways, but it’s something that I am not really interested in engaging with. On a societal level, I think we engage with Nigeria in very physical, material, and ideological ways, which makes its way into our films.”

From a filmmaking perspective, the Esiri brothers are far more at home in the world of Cannes than Nollywood. Growing up, the first African arthouse film they saw was Mahamat-Saleh Haroun’s 2006 “Daratt (Dry Season),” and that the masterworks of African pioneer Ousmane Sembène were not readily available as they are now.

There was no model for the filmmaking careers they wanted, so pursuing their dreams in New York and Europe was a given — the more visually minded Arie coming up in the camera and lighting department in Paris before attending the film grad program at Columbia University, while Chuko first became a lawyer (a career he hated) before attending NYU’s graduate film school.

But when their return home lit a desire to tell Nigerian stories, the brothers believed their biggest accomplishment wasn’t necessarily making their well-reviewed feature debut. It was the funding: Nigerian institutions and companies fully backed the production costs of both “Eyimofe” and “Clarissa.”

“I think it’s about proving to the market back home and financiers that there are audiences for this type of film,” said Arie. “Making something viable investment-wise doesn’t necessarily have to mean commercial success; it can be cultural impact and exposure to other markets. That was a big thing for our first film. Our investors were a newspaper when they wanted to move into media and our little film got them exposed to 30 different markets across the world just by appearing at festivals.”

The brothers are extremely hopeful that Neon, which signed on to distribute “Clarissa” weeks before shooting commenced, will significantly expand that reach, but they see themselves as being part of something larger. Last year, director Akinola Davies Jr’s “My Father’s Shadow” became the first Nigerian film to play at Cannes; one year later, “Clarissa” is the second. They want this to be the start of a new wave for Nigerian cinema.

“I think with the generation of filmmakers behind us, you see a film festival has started that showcases short films [in Nigeria],” said Chuko. “and y”You now have artistically minded shorts being made by local filmmakers, and obviously the internet and streaming has changed everything, so we have filmmakers that are exposed to all sorts of movies.”

By Chris O'Falt, Indie Wire

Pushback in Nigeria over ex-Boko Haram fighter reintegration

Communities in Nigeria's northeast, particularly in Borno state, are grappling with a difficult question: Can those who once took up arms against them truly return and be accepted?

Nigerian officials hope to reintegrate more than 700 former Boko Haram fighters into civilian life under its deradicalization program, Operation Safe Corridor. Authorities say the initiative is key to ending a decade-long conflict. But in communities that have borne the brunt of extremist violence, the policy is reopening wounds that have yet to heal.

The program has been running for years, but each new wave of reintegration continues to spark debate.


What is Nigeria's Operation Safe Corridor?

Operation Safe Corridor, launched in 2016, is Nigeria's deradicalization program for former Boko Haram fighters who surrender to the military.

Authorities say it is aimed at encouraging defections and reducing recruitment. Participants undergo screening, deradicalization, psychological counselling and vocational training before being cleared for reintegration.

Over 2,000 individuals have passed through the initiative, according to Nigerian authorities. Officials say only those assessed as "low risk" are released back into society.

Usman Tar, former commissioner for information and internal security in Borno state, which this year saw renewed a violence, told local media: "When they return, there is a screening by the Department of State Services and they're screened by the community leaders."

Authorities say the scheme is working.

"We did not receive any negative report from anybody from any one of them," Abdullahi Sabi Ishaq, special assistant on security to the Borno state government, told local media.

"They were accepted by the community, and we hope this one will also be accepted."


Concerns for violence-weary Nigerian communities

But on the ground, acceptance is far from guaranteed.

In Borno state, some residents like Muhammad Sharif told DW the idea of living alongside former fighters is very unsettling. He suggests former fighters should be relocated away from communities they once attacked and describes the arrangement as "improper."

"If you forgive somebody and you want to integrate him, take him to another local government where the offended people will not see that person at their midst. They will not bring us peace," he told DW.

Abraham Philip said communities are still dealing from trauma, even as the government pushes ahead with the program.

"Yes, peace is taking place also but destruction is also taking place," he told DW, referencing recent attacks, including the Monday Market, the post office and the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) bomb blast in Maiduguri.

Philip says communities have questions for the government, because "a lot of things have been happening. There are some people saying these are the results of the reintegration that has been taking place."


Could reintegrated Boko Haram members relapse?

Others say the issue is not just about reintegration — but whether former fighters have truly changed. For Maiduguri resident Usman Abubakar, the distinction between theory and reality is key.

"In principle, it is a very good idea," he said.

But he adds: "We have had instances where repentant Boko Haram threatened to go back to the bushes when the promises the state government made to them were not fulfilled. That is why I don't want to call them repentant. I want to call them surrendered because you cannot see their mind."

Some Nigerians outside the conflict-affected northeast also remain divided. In Abuja, civil servant Hauwa Ajeje told DW: "It's going to be a vicious cycle. We'll be recycling the same individuals."

Raphael Ogbaji, a student at the University of Abuja, had a more optimistic take: "If they have chosen the path of peace and the path of repentance, why not give them the benefit of the doubt? Every human being can change."


Nigerians debate over justice for Boko Haram survivors

Lawyer Ahmed Abubakar told DW reintegration raises serious questions about justice for victims.

"Those that have been affected negatively by the activities of these terrorists, they need restitution," he said, questioning why former fighters are being rehabilitated while many victims are still displaced.

"Some of the victims are still staying in Internally Displaced People's camps. Some have lost their homes and are not getting any form of justice," he said.

While Abubaker acknowledges that international law allows reintegration, he says state authorities have not been clear about who is being reintegrated or their level of involvement in extremist violence.

By Chinaza Samuel, DW


Nigeria bets on deradicalization program in North West

Weatherford selected for Nigeria deepwater work

Weatherford International has secured a deepwater integrated completions contract offshore Nigeria from ExxonMobil affiliate Esso Exploration and Production Nigeria (EEPNL), Weatherford announced on Thursday.

The company will provide upper and lower completions solutions, with equipment prepared through its global supply chain and supported locally in Nigeria. The contract falls under Weatherford’s well construction and completions portfolio.

“This contract reflects our ability to deliver integrated completions solutions for deepwater operations. We will provide technologies designed to support well integrity, reliability, and efficient execution in complex offshore environments,” said Weatherford CEO Girish Saligram.

Weatherford is a global energy services company that provides drilling, completions, production and intervention services.

In Nigeria, ExxonMobil engages in oil and gas exploration and production, petroleum products manufacturing and power generation. The company has said it plans to invest up to USD 1.5 billion in the development of Nigeria’s deepwater acreage, including towards the revitalisation of production in the Erha, Owowo and Usan oilfields.