NDLEA Busts Cocaine Warehouse, Seizes N193bn Worth of Crack, 4 Drug barons, Other Arrested

The Arrested Suspects Liningup Behind Their Luggage

NDLEA Busts Cocaine Warehouse, Seizes N193bn Worth of Crack, 4 Drug barons, Other Arrested

 In what appears to be the biggest singular cocaine seizure in the history of Nigeria’s premier anti-narcotic agency, operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), have busted a major warehouse in a secluded estate in Ikorodu area of Lagos, where 1.8 tonnes (1,855 kilograms) of the illicit drug worth more than $278, 250 million USD, equivalent of N194, 775 billion, in street value were seized.

Statement issued by Femi Babafemi, NDLEA’s Director, Media & Advocacy stated that new fewer than four drug barons including a Jamaican and the warehouse manager, were arrested in the well coordinated and intelligence led operation that lasted two days across different locations in Lagos state. 

The barons arrested include: Messrs Soji Jibril, 69, an indigene of Ibadan, Oyo state; Emmanuel Chukwu, 65, who hails from Ekwulobia, Anambra state; Wasiu Akinade, 53, from Ibadan, Oyo state; Sunday Oguntelure, 53, from Okitipupa, Ondo state and Kelvin Smith, 42, a native of Kingston, Jamaica. 

The statement stated that those arrested are all members of an international drug syndicate that the Agency has been trailing since 2018.

The warehouse which was located at 6, Olukuola crescent, Solebo Estate, Ikorodu, according to the statement, was raided on Sunday, September 18, 2022, while the barons were picked from hotels and their hideouts in different parts of Lagos between Sunday night and Monday, September 19.

The statement reads that: “preliminary investigation reveals the class A drugs were warehoused in the residential estate from where the cartel was trying to sell them to buyers in Europe, Asia and other parts of the world. They were stored in 10 travel bags and 13 drums.”

While commending all the officers and men of the Agency involved in the extensive investigation including those of the American Drug Enforcement Administration, (US-DEA), Chairman/Chief Executive of NDLEA, Brigadier General Mohamed Buba Marwa (Retd) said the bust is a historical blow to the drug cartels and a strong warning that they’ll all go down if they fail to realise that the game has changed.