Nigeria hosts 68 countries to figure out how to tackle drug trafficking

Nigeria will host 53 African countries and 15 observer nations to discuss and develop strategies of combating drug trafficking and abuse in the continent

This was said during a press conference on Tuesday in Abuja by retired Brig. Gen. Buba Marwa, chief of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

Marwa announced that the Heads of National Drug Law Enforcement Agencies in Africa (HONLAF) meeting would take place in Abuja from September 26 to September 29. Marwa was represented by the agency’s secretary, Shadrach Haruna.

He claimed it served as a forum for the continent to exchange intelligence and decide on coordinated operations and training against global drug cartels.

Marwa recalled that during the last meeting of the forum in Nairobi, Nigeria used the opportunity to broker bilateral cooperation with a number of countries.

He said that the aim was to form a strong regional defence against transnational illicit drug organisations trying to establish bases in African countries.

According to him, the bilateral relationships have been crucial to NDLEA’s interdiction exercises in the past year.

The NDLEA chairman said HONLAF is a subsidiary body of the United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs (UNCND) and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

UNODC’s country representative, Dr Oliver Stolpe, said the meeting was part of regional and national cooperation to reduce illicit production and cultivation of drugs.

“There will also be discussion on alternative development, an approach promoted by many countries; financial investigation in drug trafficking cases and the role of cryptocurrency in drug trafficking cases, and money laundering.”

Stolpe commended the operational successes of the NDLEA especially in destroying cannabis farms and manufacturing sites of other drugs like methamphetamine.

“It’s safe to say NDLEA has made great strides in confiscating the money and proceeds of drug crime; we’ll also look at how to follow the money and seize the immense riches accumulated in the drug trade,” the UNODC official added.