
A commercial tricyclist in Owerri, the
Imo State capital, and an Abuja-based trader have been caught by
National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) officials at the Murtala
Mohammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos with 6.390kg of substances
that tested positive for heroin.
One of them, Cajetan Chinedu Egwin, was
arrested on arrival from Kigali, Rwanda; the other, King Sunday, was
nabbed on arrival from Nairobi, Kenya.
The drug with an estimated street value of N575 million was hidden in their luggage.
Egwin, 32, was caught with 3.900kg of heroin and Sunday, 38, was found with 2.490kg of heroin
NDLEA Lagos Airport Commander Ahmadu
Garba said: “Egwin arrived from Kigali on a Rwanda Airline flight while
Sunday imported the drug found on him from Nairobi during inward
screening of passengers on an Ethiopian Airline flight. The suspects are
being investigated.
“Preliminary investigation by the
agency, however, indicated that drug trafficking cartels are gradually
changing their mode of operation by turning to African countries in
sourcing narcotic drugs like heroin. The suspects were also recruited
for a fee to import the drugs into the country. Egwin who is not married
said he needed money to repair his commercial tricycle while Sunday who
left his wife after four days of marriage under the guise of a business
trip said that he needed money for his honeymoon and business.”
Egwin, a commercial tricycle rider in Owerri told investigators that he needed money to change his tricycle.
“The engine of my tricycle which is my
only source of livelihood is bad. While I was looking for money to fix
it, I was introduced to the man that promised to pay me N400,000 on the
condition that I will bring his drug from Kigali. I accepted the offer
because nobody was willing to help me. Apart from the repairs, my rent
is due and my landlord has been asking for his money,” he said.
Sunday said he made a mistake in
dabbling to drug traffic stating: “I erroneously took the decision to
smuggle drugs barely four days after my marriage. I was in need of money
for my honeymoon and also for my business but I should not have
involved myself in drug trafficking. My thinking was that I could
smuggle the drug from Nairobi in two days without my wife knowing that I
travelled out of the country. All my life, I have been upright in my
transactions but this is a huge mistake and I regret my action.”
NDLEA’s Chairman/Chief Executive Col
Muhammad Abdallah (rtd) said drug traffickers were turning to African
countries to smuggle heroin produced in Afghanistan, Pakistan, India,
Thailand and other far away countries.
”The Agency successfully foiled their
plan with the arrest and seizure of the drugs. Drug cartels thought it
would be easy to smuggle the drugs into the country since heroin is not
produced in Africa but I am happy that we are thinking far ahead of
them,” he said.
credit: thenation
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