Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Nigeria teams up with US and UK to investigate cocaine haul
Authorities recovered a ton of cocaine from a container at Lagos' Tincan Island Port.
The shipment, worth more than 338 billion naira ($235 million, €232 million), was discovered during a joint inspection last weekend.
Officials described it as the largest single seizure of cocaine at Tincan Island Port.
Global investigation to find drug smugglers
NDLEA says officers from the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the UK's National Crime Agency (NCA) "have already joined the ongoing investigation to track the cartel behind the consignment."
"The essence of collaborating with our international partners on this case is to ensure no stone is left unturned and every gap is sufficiently covered so that ultimately we can get all the masterminds of this huge consignment brought to book wherever they are located across the globe," the NDLEA chair Mohamed Buba Marwa said.
Nigeria is a major transit hub for drugs in West Africa and is also becoming a key producer, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
By Louis Oelofse, DW
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
Nigerian officials seize cocaine worth almost $3 million at Lagos airport
Nigerian officials seized 19.4 kg (42.77 pounds) of cocaine worth 4.66 billion naira ($2.93 million) from a passenger who arrived at Lagos airport on a flight from Ethiopia, its anti-drug agency said on Tuesday.
The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) said it arrested a 48-year Nigerian businessman, who had been convicted of trafficking last year but paid a fine to avoid jail time, on Sept. 18. He was allegedly carrying 817 wraps of cocaine.
Nigeria, Africa's most populous country with over 200 million people, has in recent years gone from being a transit point for gangs moving drugs between South America and Europe to a full-blown consumer and distributor.
"The agency will continue to work to disrupt the activities of drug cartels operating in the country," NDLEA chief Mohammed Buba Marwa said in a statement.
By Camillus Eboh, Reuters
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
Nigeria Arrests Man for Smuggling 88 Drug Wraps in Stomach
Paul Mbadugha, a Vietnam-bound businessman, was stopped at Abuja airport’s boarding gate after a body scan revealed he had ingested drugs, Nigeria’s National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) stated Sunday.
While under observation, Mbadugha reportedly excreted the cocaine pellets, claiming they were handed to him by a friend in Lagos’ Isolo district.
Mbadugha claimed that his friend persuaded him to swallow the drug wraps, promising a payout of $2,000 in return.
Dr. Enyinna Omoke, MD, an Abuja-based doctor who witnessed the incident, told OCCRP that cocaine is among the most frequently trafficked drugs using this method—swallowing or inserting packages into body cavities.
“Internally smuggling drugs can hyperstimulate the central nervous system, which includes the brain and spinal cord, leading to severe consequences such as brain damage, respiratory failure, and even death,” he explained.
The gastrointestinal tract, from mouth to anus, as well as the vagina and ears, are the most common areas used for internal drug concealment. Individuals who transport drugs this way are often caught due to suspicious behavior, intoxication, or leakage from the drug packets inside their bodies.
Last year, the NDLEA apprehended a notorious drug kingpin known for recruiting young Nigerians to smuggle cocaine into Europe. He was caught in the act of arranging for a courier to swallow 93 cocaine pellets destined for distribution in Italy.
By Nneoma Omeje, OCCRP
Friday, May 10, 2024
Senate in Nigeria proposes death penalty for drug trafficking
Nigeria's Senate on Thursday proposed significantly toughening penalties for drug trafficking, making the death penalty the new maximum sentence through a law amendment.
The amendment, which is not yet law, replaces life imprisonment, which was previously the harshest punishment.
Nigeria, Africa's most populous country of more than 200 million people, has in recent years gone from being a transit point for illegal drugs to a full-blown producer, consumer and distributor.
Opioid abuse, especially tramadol and cough syrups containing codeine, has been widespread throughout Nigeria, according to the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, which banned production and import of codeine cough syrup in 2018.
While cannabis is cultivated locally, cocaine, methamphetamine and other narcotics are trafficked through the country alongside opioids to feed a growing addiction problem.
The legislation stemmed from a report by the Senate committees on judiciary, human rights and legal matters, and drugs and narcotics, which Senator Mohammed Monguno presented during Thursday's plenary session.
Supporters argued the threat of execution would serve as a stronger deterrent to drug traffickers than life imprisonment.
Lawmakers who opposed the measure expressed concerns about the irreversible nature of the death penalty and the possibility of wrongful convictions.
The House of Representatives earlier passed the bill but without a death penalty provision. Five select members of the Senate and House will need to harmonize the two versions before it goes to the president.
By Camillus Eboh, Reuters
Related story: Video - Opioid crisis in Nigeria
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Video - Opioid crisis in Nigeria
West Africa - and particularly its most populous nation, Nigeria - is battling an opioid abuse crisis. Medicines such as tramadol, legally and legitimately prescribed by doctors for pain relief, are also being taken in life-threatening doses by millions in search of a fix or a release from poverty, unemployment and lack of opportunity. People & Power sent filmmakers Naashon Zalk and Antony Loewenstein to Nigeria to investigate how the drug is smuggled, traded and abused, as well as the widespread corruption that follows this illicit trafficking, and the appalling health consequences for those in its grip.
Related story: Growing meth market in Nigeria
Growing meth market in Nigeria
In late 2018, following the dismantling of a lab in Obinugwu village in south-east Nigeria, NDLEA Special Enforcement Team commander Sunday Zirangey reportedly said that meth was a serious threat and that Nigeria risked turning into a narco state.
Despite the acute health risks associated with its consumption – such as high blood pressure and cardiovascular-related illness – a growing number of young people in Nigeria reportedly take the drug. A 2018 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report estimated that 89 000 Nigerians were using meth. Abimbola Adebakin, a leading Lagos-based pharmacist, told Enact that “the youth may be using drugs increasingly to cope with a depressed economic reality for them”.
“Furthermore, due to our weak pharmaceutical drug distribution system, the youth have a porous drug supply situation that lends itself to support such abuse and misuse, she said.
In 2016, the illicit market for meth took a new turn in Nigeria. Drug syndicates brought Latin American drug experts to Nigeria to help them set up large-scale meth labs, with similar characteristics to those found in Mexico. One industrial super lab was said to have the capacity to produce 4,000 kg of meth per week.
When the NDLEA raided the site in March 2016, they arrested four Mexicans and five Nigerians. The Mexicans were reportedly from Sinaloa State. Their arrest provided further evidence of a formal and successful alliance between Nigerian and Latin American cartels.
The growth of the illicit meth market in Nigeria has also been fuelled by the accessibility of precursor chemicals such as ephedrine, which is theoretically a controlled substance but is widely available in Nigeria.
In March 2019, the NDLEA seized 309 kg of ephedrine from members of a criminal network in Trans Ekulu Estate in Enugu and Festac Town in Lagos. According to a 2017 report by the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs in Vienna, Nigerian criminal networks bring ephedrine in from countries in West Africa that import more than they need.
According to the UNODC’s Cheikh Touré, the “use and diversion of pre-precursors and other non-controlled chemicals signifies complex challenges in addressing clandestine meth manufacturing in Nigeria and West Africa”. Touré is the UNODC programme co-ordinator for the Economic Community of West African States Regional Action Plan to address the growing problem of illicit drug trafficking, organised crime and drug abuse in West Africa.
While a portion of the meth produced in Nigeria is consumed locally, most is reportedly exported to South Africa where 1kg of meth sells for up to €10 000 (R163,000). It is also trafficked to South-East Asia, in particular Japan, where 1kg can reportedly fetch €130,000.
As in Mexico where syndicates use violence to control the drug market, confrontations between drug gangs in Nigeria have increased. In August 2017, gunmen attacked a church in Ozubulu in Anambra State while looking for a rival drug gang leader, killing 13 people. An investigation revealed that the fighting was between two gangs operating from South Africa.
According to Touré: “Nigeria has built up expertise in relation to the detection and dismantling of clandestine methamphetamine laboratories.” He said stricter control by the national authorities on precursor chemicals and other psychotropic substances was being implemented.
However, despite the great efforts the Nigerian authorities are making to contain illicit meth production, the illicit market of the drug is yet to be eradicated. The government should focus on effective regulation of the import of controlled precursors.
By Mouhamadou Kane
Daily Maverick
Thursday, December 20, 2018
Fear of Nigeria becoming a Narco State
More than 50 drug enforcement officials crept through the compound and surrounded the methamphetamine lab hidden by overgrown jungle behind the property.
“It took one year of surveillance,” a National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) officer, who was involved in the raid, told AFP. “They were all sleeping. We took them by surprise.” Inside the lab there was 78 kilograms (171 pounds) of meth — a drug as notorious for its exhilarating highs as its life-destroying, addictive lows.
Drug trafficking is nothing new to Nigeria, which has long been a transit point for cocaine and heroin going to Europe and North America. The difference is that now Nigerians are producing the drugs.
With vast quantities of chemicals entering the country, porous borders and corrupt law enforcement, Nigeria is an ideal place to produce the drug.
Since the country’s first meth lab was discovered in 2011, authorities have found 14 more producing mass quantities of the stimulant, while seizures of the drug have jumped from 177 kilos in 2012 to 1,363 kilos in 2016.
Ideal conditions
Friday, June 1, 2018
Tramadol fueling death, despair, and Boko Haram in Nigeria
But codeine is not the only opioid scourge spreading across West Africa. Another painkiller, Tramadol, is fuelling widespread addiction - and as the BBC's Stephanie Hegarty found out, it may even be fuelling insurgency in the north-east.
When Mustafa Kolo, 23, takes the bright red pills he feels like he can push a tree. It's like his body isn't his. They obliterate the negative thoughts.
"When I take it, I forget everything," he says.
It's 10:00, Mr Kolo and his friend Modu Mohamed are with their boss, the commander of a vigilante unit set up to protect the city of Maiduguri from Boko Haram.
The young recruits are clearly uncomfortable.
"How many did you take today?" I asked them.
"Today? None," came the reply.
Mr Kolo's eyes are dark and bloody red, he slurs slightly as he talks. Mr Mohamed is listless and distracted. His head is hanging between his bony shoulders.
It's obvious they're lying. The commander steps in and urges them to tell the truth.
"I used to take three to four when I first began taking it. But now I have reduced it to one or half," Mr Kolo says, unwilling to go further.
In this troubled town, thousands of people are addicted to Tramadol - the vigilante fighters, those displaced by the war and even the militants themselves.
The cheap opioid painkiller is meant to be used to treat moderate to acute pain. But, like most opioids, it is addictive - although just how addictive is a matter for debate.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says Tramadol is generally thought to have a "low potential for dependence relative to morphine".
But the epidemic of addiction erupting across West Africa could yet disprove that.
"The problem is really huge," says Marcus Ayuba, head of Nigeria's National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) in Borno state, bowing his head sadly.
"It's really huge."
Mr Ayuba runs a drug treatment centre in Maiduguri, the state capital where, by his own estimate, one in three young people are addicted to the drug - an epidemic which, he believes, can be traced back to a decade of war.
"People have lost everything," he says. "They are young people who were basically farmers, they've lost their farms, their homes."
"Parents have seen children killed in their presence," he adds.
Mr Ayuba says during counselling, people have told him, "What else can we do? We just want to get out of the world."
But the crisis didn't bring Tramadol to Nigeria. Mr Kolo started taking Tramadol in 2007, two years before the insurgency began.
At first, he says he took it to help him to work. It dulled the pain of physical labour while helping to keep him awake.
But now because of his addiction, he can't get work. Instead he volunteers with the civilian vigilante force.
"It really helps me in fighting Boko Haram," he says. "When I go into the bush, even the way I run, the way I walk, it's different. It gives me strength."
But the enemy too seems to have caught on to this trick.
A former militant fighter is sitting in a soft, lilac coloured Hawaiian shirt.
The 21-year-old is in the custody of the Nigerian army after running away from Boko Haram in January.
For four years, he lived in a forest camp where there wasn't enough food or water - but there was Tramadol.
"When you are going for a military operation you will be given it to take, otherwise if you take it you will be killed," he says.
"They told us when you take it you will be less afraid - you will be strong and courageous."
The drug was once plentiful, but in the past few months, as the Nigerian army closed in on their camps, supplies became scarce.
Tramadol was reserved only for leaders and those going into battle. The former fighter believes they were all addicted.
The idea of an army of Islamist militants tanked up on opioids and sent out to kill is terrifying, and Mr Ayuba says believes it has contributed to the brutality of this conflict.
"Nobody has the natural will to take someone's life. Drugs are always there to give you the push," he says.
Then there are the women who have escaped from Boko Haram and now find themselves addicted to drugs.
One 16-year-old told him the militants would drug girls when they started crying.
"When she escaped she was looking for something to knock her out," he says.
At the choked port of Lagos, an officer from the NDLEA orders men to break open a container with a crow bar. Stacked from top to bottom are boxes of an over-the-counter painkiller, but hidden behind them are thousands of packets of Tramadol.
The brand is Super RolmeX. On the packet it says "Made in India, for export only". That is because the dosage - at 225mg - is more than twice what is legal in most countries.
It says it's manufactured for Sintex Technologies Ltd in London, England, but a quick search on the UK companies register online shows that company was dissolved in 2012.
There are six containers and millions of tablets in this shipment alone.
The UN say Tramadol is being smuggled into Africa from South Asia by international criminal gangs, with yearly seizures in sub-Saharan Africa rising from 300kg (661lb)per year to more than three tonnes since 2013, according to a report in December.
So with abuse clearly happening in places like Nigeria, it's hard to understand why Tramadol is scheduled two ranks below oxycontin, morphine or high dosages of codeine by the US.
"It could be that it's a weak opioid," says Dr Eric Stein, an expert in drug abuse.
"At the end of the day the ready availability of stronger opioids make it unnecessary [for those trying to get high]" he says.
"If you're looking to get drunk, do you drink a beer or do shots?"
So why is it so prevalent in Nigeria? Firstly it is cheap - in Nigeria it's about $0.05 for 200mg as opposed to about $2.50 in the US, and secondly its ability to help people work. Across Africa, many people rely still on manual labour to get paid.
Mr Ayuba believes religion may have a part to play as well. Alcohol is forbidden in the majority Muslim communities of north-east Nigeria, but there is less of a taboo around prescription drugs.
Despite anecdotal evidence, the WHO has so far resisted putting international controls on its trade.
There are fears limiting access to the drug would cut people off who really need it: it is one of the few painkillers widely available to treat pain for cancer patients.
It can also be brought in pretty easily to crisis and emergency situations, says Gilles Forte, secretary of the group responsible for reviewing Tramadol at the WHO.
"If it's scheduled it becomes difficult to move it from one country to another," he explains.
But as long as it is so freely available the addiction crisis will continue. As it is, Mr Ayuba can only manage a fraction of the cases he is presented with every day.
Though they would like to, the parents of Mustafa Kolo - the young vigilante - cannot afford to send him to the drug treatment centre.
"I used to dream about grandchildren from him. Now, I see that I have lost," says his father.
"All my country has lost, because of what he is doing."
Wednesday, May 16, 2018
Young Nigerians turning to drugs
A growing number of young Nigerians are addicted to drugs, officials and police say, turning to cheap narcotics like codeine, tramadol, and other chemical substances in search of a high.
Monday, August 21, 2017
Nigerian drug smuggler exretes 1410.9 grams of cocaine wraps
Details reaching Vanguard disclosed that Obiekezie, with Nigerian standard Passport No. A50296207, was on 2nd October, 2016, arrested at the Baiyun International Airport in Guangzhou, China, upon arrival from Addis Ababa aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight No. ET 606 on suspicion of smuggled drugs, which he swallowed and brought to China.
He has, since October 3, 2016, joined the growing list of Nigerians who are detained and serving various jail terms in Guangdong Province, China, after he excreted a total of 1410.9 grams of cocaine at the Chinese Aviation hospital. Having been in detention since then, Obiekezie was on August 18, 2017, issued a death sentence, following rejection of an appeal made at the Intermediate Peoples’ court of Guangzhou on April 7, 2017, after he was declared guilty of smuggling the hard drug into China and was given suspended death sentence.

