NDLEA commander at the Abuja airport, Hamisu Lawan, has confirmed that officers of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja have arrested Okolo Emenike Kingsley with parcels of whitish substance that tested positive for cocaine weighing 9.15kgs inside the soles of shoes.
The discovery was made in a shipment of shoes during inward screening of passengers on a Turkish airline flight from Sao Paulo, Brazil. The cocaine was industrially concealed in the soles of new footwears. It was the last arrest of 2016 at the Abuja airport with an estimated value of 3.8 million Pounds.
NDLEA commander at the Abuja airport, Hamisu Lawan, confirmed that the arrest was made during the inward screening of passengers and luggage on a Turkish airline flight from Brazil.
“There was an arrest at the weekend of a 34-year-old suspect, Okolo Emenike Kingsley, who hails from Ezeagu, Enugu State. The motorcycle parts dealer said he was offered the N1 million to smuggle the drugs to Nigeria. Investigation is ongoing and the suspect is cooperating with our team of undercover officers.”
According to him, the suspect confessed thus: “I am a motorcycle parts dealer, married with a child. My business was failing due to recession so I travelled to Brazil in search of employment. Things became worse for me in Brazil because I had no money to sustain myself while my work permit was being processed. I was equally confronted with the fear of deportation.
“This made me to be desperate in my search for quick wealth. In the process, I met my childhood friend who offered me N1 million to traffic cocaine to Nigeria. He also paid for my ticket and gave me three bags of shoes containing the cocaine. On arrival at the Abuja airport, the cocaine was detected and I was arrested. I had wanted to invest the money in business in Nigeria,” Okolo told officials.
Chairman of the NDLEA, Muhammad Mustapha Abdallah, said the huge profit derived from drug trafficking has made it a top priority for drug cartels to be financially incapacitated.
“We will continue to take deliberate steps to intercept drugs and ultimately prevent the criminal enrichment of drug cartels. Illicit drug proceeds negatively affect economic development, could be used to corrupt government officials and terrorism funding thereby subjecting mankind to widespread destruction,” he said.
Abdallah commended the officers, describing the seizure as one of the benefits of training. In his words, “the seizure is a validation of enhanced capacity of officers due to series of training programmes carried out by the agency. The training covering investigation, raid operations, as well as prosecution, was conducted with the assistance of the United States government, European Union (EU) and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).”