CrimeHighlight

How 6.7 Tonnes of Cannabis Were Stopped Before They Reached Nigeria’s Streets

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For millions of Nigerian families, Wednesday’s formal handover of 6.7 tonnes of cannabis to the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) in Lagos was more than another drug seizure.

It was a reminder of the unseen battle being fought daily to keep dangerous narcotics out of communities.

The massive consignment of Canadian Loud, a potent strain of cannabis weighing 6,778.5 kilograms, could have found its way into neighbourhoods, schools and cities across the country.

Instead, it ended at the Apapa Port in Lagos, where NDLEA formally took custody after months of painstaking intelligence gathering and international collaboration.

Behind the seizure was a coordinated operation involving the NDLEA, the Nigeria Customs Service, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and other security agencies, whose officers quietly tracked the containers across continents before moving in.

Representing NDLEA Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, retired Brig.-Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa, the agency’s Director of Seaport Operations, ACGN Ibinabo Archie-Abia, described the operation as proof that intelligence and collaboration can outsmart sophisticated international drug syndicates.

Investigators revealed that the traffickers attempted to conceal their movements by routing the shipments through multiple countries and ports, hoping to avoid detection.

But surveillance teams followed every stage of the journey until the containers arrived in Lagos.

Marwa stressed that the agency’s mission extends far beyond intercepting illicit drugs.

“Our work does not end with seizure. We are committed to identifying, arresting and prosecuting those responsible, confiscating their criminal assets and ensuring they derive no benefit from their illegal enterprise,” he said.

He also praised the professionalism and commitment of officers from the NDLEA, the Nigeria Customs Service and other partner agencies, whose coordinated efforts prevented the huge shipment from reaching the streets.

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For the officers involved, the operation was another victory in a relentless fight against organised crime.

For ordinary Nigerians, it may represent thousands of young lives protected from the devastating consequences of drug abuse.

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