Tag: drug traffickers

  • Call for stiffer penalties for drug traffickers

    Call for stiffer penalties for drug traffickers

    Sir: A few days ago, while browsing online, I came across a troubling report about a 37-year-old man, Nwobodo Chidiebere Basil, who had once again been arrested for the same drug-related offence he was punished for some years earlier. The story was unsettling, not just because of the crime itself, but because it highlighted a deeper problem: how lightly some drug offences are treated, even after the damage they cause has become painfully clear.

    Stories like this revive a long-standing public conversation about whether punishments for drug trafficking truly match the gravity of the harm involved. Across the country, many concerned citizens have continued to argue that weak sentences fail to discourage offenders, especially when drug abuse and trafficking are already tearing families apart, destroying young lives, and burdening communities with lasting health and social problems.

    There is a widely held belief that punishment should not only be corrective but also preventive. When penalties are mild and easily bypassed with money, they send the wrong message—that crime can be a calculated risk rather than a serious moral and legal violation. Young people watching from the side-lines may conclude that the rewards outweigh the consequences, and that is a dangerous lesson for any society.

    Consider the effort involved in bringing a drug offender to justice. Law enforcement officers often risk their lives tracking suspects, gathering evidence, and seeing cases through to court. Yet, after all that sacrifice, a conviction may result in a short prison term with an option of a fine that a well-funded offender can easily pay. As a result, the individual walks free, unchanged, while the officer is left wondering whether the struggle was worth it. In such situations, justice feels incomplete—not just to the public, but to those tasked with protecting it.

    Contrast that with a firm, non-negotiable sentence that reflects the seriousness of the offence. A lengthy prison term without the option of a fine sends a powerful signal. It tells potential offenders that drug trafficking is not a business risk but a life-altering mistake. It also reassures honest citizens and dedicated NDLEA officers that the law stands firmly on the side of public safety.

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    The case of Nwobodo Chidiebere Basil is cited because it follows a familiar pattern. After an earlier arrest involving a large quantity of hard drugs concealed for export, he was convicted and paid a fine. Rather than abandon the trade, he reportedly returned to it, adopting new methods and deeper secrecy. That return to crime suggests that the earlier punishment failed to reform or deter him.

    One can only imagine the mind-set of those around such offenders—friends, partners, or associates—who may assume that arrest is merely a temporary inconvenience, easily resolved with money. If consequences were truly severe and unavoidable, that confidence would vanish, and with it, much of the temptation to persist in the trade.

    Ultimately, this is not about vengeance; it is about protection, responsibility, and the value we place on human life. Drug trafficking fuels addiction, violence, broken homes, and lost futures. If the law treats it casually, society pays the price repeatedly. Stronger, more consistent punishments may not solve the problem overnight, but they could mark a decisive step toward discouraging repeat offences and safeguarding the next generation from a path that leads only to ruin.

     •Aernan Lubem, Makurdi, Benue state

  • Why there should be no leniency for drug traffickers

    Why there should be no leniency for drug traffickers

    • By Neta Dorcas

    Sir: I feel compelled to highlight a pressing issue that poses a threat to the very foundation of our society: Drug trafficking. Nigeria’s youth, who constitute 70% of the population, are trapped by this complex problem, putting our future at great risk.

    The recent arrest of Christian Ifeanyi Ogbuji at Murtala Muhammed International Airport with a staggering N4.6 billion worth of cocaine underscores the seriousness of this situation. What’s even more concerning is that Ogbuji had previously been arrested just 16 months prior for ingesting 93 pellets of cocaine. Despite being sentenced to a two-year imprisonment with the option of paying a fine of N3 million, he quickly returned to his illegal trade. This pattern is common among drug peddlers, who view the current sentencing options as nothing more than a temporary inconvenience.

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    Such repeat offences are a direct result of the lenient penalties in our judicial system. No doubt the NDLEA under Buba Marwa has made impressive strides in intercepting massive drug consignments and dismantling cartels, however, these efforts are consistently undermined by the judicial option of fines. Drug traffickers see these fines as insignificant deterrents.

    The success of the NDLEA in intercepting large quantities of drugs and apprehending high-profile traffickers shows that with the right tools, we can combat this problem. However, the lack of severe penalties, such as mandatory prison sentences, limits the impact of these efforts.

    As Nigerians, we must urge the National Assembly to take bold and immediate action. The current NDLEA Act must be reviewed to eliminate the option of fines for drug trafficking offences. Harsher penalties, including mandatory prison sentences, are crucial to dissuade traffickers who are currently encouraged by a system that allows them to resume their illicit activities with minimal disruption. This is especially critical given that over 14 million Nigerians are trapped in substance abuse, which could lead to the unravelling of the nation’s social fabric.

    We must also address the root causes of drug trafficking, including poverty, lack of education, and unemployment. Addressing these issues requires investing in rehabilitation programs, creating economic opportunities, and supporting communities affected by drug abuse.

    It is time for the National Assembly to adopt a zero-tolerance stance. We owe it to our children and the future of Nigeria. Leniency towards drug traffickers must end now. Our law enforcement agencies need the full support of the judicial system. Only through collective efforts, from the government to civil society to individual citizens, can we hope to eradicate the deadly grip of drug abuse and trafficking and secure a healthier, drug-free future for Nigeria’s youth.

    • Neta Dorcas,

     Kaduna, Kaduna State.

  • Death for drug traffickers: a superfluous bill

    Death for drug traffickers: a superfluous bill

    Weeks ago, the Nigerian Senate passed an amended bill prescribing death penalty for persons who, without lawful authority; imports, manufactures, produces, processes, plants or grows the drugs popularly known as cocaine, heroin or any other similar drugs. The bill, which the House of Representatives also promised to pass, seeks to amend Section 11 of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency Act. When the Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, headed by Tahir Monguno (APC, Borno North) worked upon the bill, there was no mention of the death penalty. During a consideration by the Committee of the Whole, Senator Ali Ndume (APC, Borno South) brusquely proposed the death penalty, and presto, it was carried.

    Read Also: Senate okays death penalty for drug traffickers

    Nigeria undoubtedly has a drug problem, like many other countries, but not more hellish than banditry, insurgency, kidnapping, etc. Has the death penalty solved these other crimes? After the infamous and controversial judicial murder of Lawal Ojuolape, 30, Bernard Ogedengbe, 29, and Bartholomew Owoh, 26, in April 1985, during the brief military regime of Muhammadu Buhari, no administration has contemplated the death penalty for drug offences. The original amendment by the Sen. Monguno committee made strong proposals for revamping the anti-drug war. The House of Representatives and the federal government should stick to those proposals and expunge the unworkable and clearly outsized death penalty. Thousands of condemned criminals are on death row all over Nigeria with no prospect of being executed due to unsigned warrants. Adding hundreds more will be foolish and wasteful of court time.

  • NDLEA arrests 200 suspected drug traffickers

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Oyo State Command, has arrested 200 suspected drug traffickers and convicted 39 from January to December, 2018.

    Commander Mrs. Omolade Faboyede said yesterday in Ibadan that the convicts were sentenced to jail terms ranging from six months to 10 years.

    She said 5,593.426 kilogrames of illicit drugs were seized from the suspects, indicating a decrease from the 7,090.34 kilogrammes seized in 2017.

    Faboyede said the anti-drug agency also gave drug intervention to 102 persons, among whom eight have been rehabilitated and successfully integrated into the society.

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    “It should be noted that the reduction in the demand for drug in the state is as a result of the deliberate activities of the command.

    “Our enlightenment campaigns against drug abuse and trafficking in the state are yielding positive results as we reach out to all and sundry, including primary and secondary schools, tertiary institutions, private organisations and government establishments.”

    She advised the public to report suspicious movements to the authorities concerned, to enable them rid the society of crimes.

  • NDLEA arrests 103 suspected drug traffickers

    The Edo Command of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency says it has arrested 103 suspects for trafficking illicit drugs.

    Mr Peter Ogar, Head of Operations and Intelligence in the command, made the disclosure in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria  in Benin on Monday.

    Ogar said the suspects, comprised of 88 males and 15 females, were arrested between July and September in various parts of the state.

    He explained that more than 4,000 kilograms of suspected Indian hemp was seized within the period while 14 farmlands of about 10 hectares cultivated with the plant, were destroyed.

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    Ogar however said that the command had rehabilitated 79 drug addicts who had reunited with their families, while two are still undergoing intensive rehabilitation.

    “It is peak period for traffickers because it is the harvest season,” he noted, adding that this has led to upsurge in arrest of suspects and seizures by the agency.

    The Assistant Commander disclosed that the NDLEA had filed 18 cases in courts within the period, while several others are pending.

  • Police arrest 85 suspected cultists, robbers, drug traffickers

    Bayelsa State Police Command said yesterday that it had arrested 85 suspected cultists, robbers and drug peddlers.

    It decried activities of cultists and criminals.

    Police Commissioner Don Awunah said the Anti-Cultism Unit effected the arrest in a renewed onslaught on criminals.

    He said some of the suspects had been arraigned, while others were being investigated.

    Awunah said the police dislodged 15 robbery gangs, 15 drug peddlers and recovered 49 firearms.

    He said the passage of Secret Cults/Societies and Similar Activities Prohibition (Amendment) Law, 2018, by the government empowered the police to tackle cultists and cult-related violence.

    The police boss said since the introduction of ‘Operation Safer Bayelsa’, the command had confronted robbers, kidnappers, cultists and drug dealers.

    He said the police mopped up arms and weapons from unauthorised people.

    “Proliferation of arms and weapons has fuelled insecurity. It is against this background that theInspector-General Ibrahim Idris directed his commissioners to mop up arms and ammunition.

    “In Bayelsa, despite the intervention of Amnesty programme, arms and ammunition are in circulation.

    “In compliance with the IGP directive, the command has seized 49 firearms from criminals.

    “It has smashed 15 robbery gangs, arrested suspects, recovered arms and ammunition and stolen items. These resulted in reduction in crimes,” Awunah added.

    On drug abuse, he said the police, through intelligence and with the cooperation of the public, dislodged 15 drug peddlers.

    “The dislodgement led to the disruption of their supply chain. Twelve firearms, narcotics and weeds suspected to be Indian hemp were recovered from the traffickers,” the commissioner said.

    He passed a vote of confidence in Idris for his policy, direction, logistic support and adoption of democratic policing.

    Awunah said the IGP deserved praise for his support and motivation, which led the command to record achievements.

    He said: “The inspector-general of Police has remained an ardent believer in principles and core values of community policing. A paradigm shift from reactionary, traditional policing. He is a driver of the change mantra in police and a crusader of police reforms.

    “Idris is a resource person in international policing style and culture of excellence, an epitome of ethical leadership and true believer in the Nigerian project.”

  • NDLEA nabs two drug traffickers with N50m worth narcotics

    NDLEA nabs two drug traffickers with N50m worth narcotics

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) Kano, at the Malam Aminu Kano International Airport (MAKIA) command yesterday paraded two suspected drug traffickers in possession of hard drugs valued at over N50 million.

    Speaking to reporters on the arrest, the MAKIA NDLEA Commander, Mr. Ambrose Umoru, said that the suspected drug traffickers were apprehended on February 17 by anti narcotic agents attached to the airport.

    He explained that the suspects were apprehended during routine inward screening of passengers onboard Ethiopian Airlines flight number ET 941.

    According to him, one of the suspects, Nweke Emmanuel, (49) who hails from Ire in Idenmili South Local Government Area of Anambra State, was in possession of 2.180kg of ingested heroine detected during the screening exercise. .

    Umoru said:  “The suspect is a businessman and barber who is based in Kinshasha, Democratic Republic of Congo, traveled to Bujumbura, Burundi where he ingested a total of 127 wraps of heroine.”

    The second suspect, Miss Olunwabusola Dumebi (32), from Ibusa in Oshimili Local Government Area of Delta State, a stylist by profession, was billed to board same flight with the first suspect.

    He noted three kg of a whitish powdery substance suspected to be cocaine was also discovered in her possession.

     

  • Drug traffickers make $320 billion yearly, says NDLEA

    Drug traffickers make $320 billion yearly, says NDLEA

    •Over 70,000 suspects arrested in two years

    A drug trafficking syndicate generate $320 billion, approximately N115.2trillion annually, the National Drug Law and Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) said yesterday.

    This is just as the agency said it arrested a total of 77,558 persons for drug trafficking between 2015 and last year.

    NDLEA’s Chairman, Muhammad Abdallah, stated this at a-day seminar organised to commemorate the International Day Against Drug and Human Trafficking.

    Abdallah, who was represented by Kayode Adeniyi, described drug trafficking as the most lucrative business, noting that its high profit was a motivating factor for the traffickers.

    The event, which held at the Renaissance Hotel, Isaac John, Ikeja, was attended by senior police officers, operatives of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons  (NAPTIP) and private security practitioners, among others.

    Abdallah said: “The NDLEA first discovered a methamphetamine laboratory at Maza-Maza area of Lagos in 2011 and till date, 12 other laboratories have been discovered in Lagos, Anambra and Delta states.

    “Of the arrested 77,558 drug traffickers, 72,735 are males and 4,823 females. So, you can see that the business of drug trafficking is not gender-based.

    “It is very painful that Nigeria has been implicated as a source, transit and destination point for drugs and human trafficking.”

    According to Abdallah, all hands must be on deck to check the menace, urging other security agencies to corporate by sharing intelligence.

    The chairman of the event, Wale Olaoye, noted that human trafficking would surpass illegal arms sale if nothing was done to contain it.

    Olaoye, who is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Halogen Security, said: “We are looking to change the narratives as Nigeria tops other countries in production and seizure of hard drugs. Nigeria also has the highest number of persons serving jail terms for drug offences in the world, which should be of great concern to us.

    “The laws governing human and drug trafficking needs to be made stiffer because fines no longer make them effective to check the menace. There is need for a robust and effective border control system.”

    Commissioner of Police (CP) Fatai Owoseni called for an overhaul of the adoption system in place.

    Owoseni, who was represented by the Area D Commander, Akinbayo Olasuji, an Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), called for attitudinal change.

     

     

     

  • Looters worse than drug traffickers, says Osinbajo

    Looters worse than drug traffickers, says Osinbajo

    •Acting President seeks sanctions against banks aiding looting

    To those accused of plundering the commonwealth, the Federal Government’s anti-graft battle is a media trial. But Acting President Yemi Osinbajo says the discovery of large sums of money in ‘unusual’ places, including grave yards, soakaway and private apartments, will make news anywhere in the world, report Augustine Ehikioya and Collins Nweze.

    BANKS and other financial institutions withholding illicit funds should be made to face the consequences of engaging in criminal conduct, Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has said.

    Osinbajo made the recommendation yesterday in an address at the “Conference on Promoting International Cooperation in Combating Illicit Financial Flows and Enhancing Asset Recovery to Foster Sustainable Development” at the old Banquet Hall of the State House in Abuja.

    According to the Acting President, public assests and funds’ looters are worse than drug traffickers.

    He said those plundering the commonwealth were worse than perpetrators of crime against humanity.

    The Acting President said: “It is a good thing that we are here with our partners who agree that not only are these stolen assets criminalised but that they are returned to their appropriate owners.

    “There is no way the transfer of these assets can happen without a handshake between the countries that they are transferred to and the international banking institutions in those countries. There is no way it will happen without some form of connivance.

    “We have to look at how to delegitimise the financial institutions involved in such transactions and criminalise them. The banks and financial institutions that actually engage in such acts should be called out and made to face the consequences of engaging in criminal practices. If that isn’t done, we are not likely to go very far.

    “For there to be collaboration, there must first be connivance. In the agreement and conventions we will be signing, we must find a way and ensure that financial institutions are not given a free run but hold them accountable.”

    He described as unacceptable a situation in which proceeds from political corruption do not attract the same outrage that proceeds from narcotics and trafficking in persons attract internationally.

    Osinbajo said: “It took years for some people to agree that when somebody loot money where people make decent living that is more criminal than crime against humanity, more dangerous than trafficking in drugs.,

    He said: “It took years for some people to agree that when somebody loot money where people make decent living, that is more criminal than crime against humanity, more dangerous than trafficking in drugs., “

    African countries and developing countries, he said, must take it as their responsibility to find the funds and ensure their repatriation.

    Noting that it was not enough to talk about the stolen funds, he described as unfortunate that some countries have been reluctant to return looted funds.

    He also said many countries have civil processes that make it difficult to return stolen assets being kept in their domains.

    Osinbajo said: “They say our courts are handling this matter and there is very little we can do about. – We must make it a national call, a call for other developing countries to have the same outrage for drugs, terrorist financing for illicit financial flows.

    “We must emphasis at every point and call out institutions that are not cooperating and ensuring that they recognise that this for us is a serious issue.

    “Like President Buhari has said repeatedly that if we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill us. When corrupt funds find safe havens, it will begin to fight back; and if the government is not careful, it can fight back.,

    “In Nigeria for instance, where corruption fights back so eloquently, the government itself, if not careful, can be overwhelmed.

    “If you look at the anti-corruption fight in Nigeria, there is a major fight back in the media. There is a media war, between people fighting corruption and those behind the stolen funds.

    “They call the anti-corruption crusade media trial. I don’t know what that means. If you discover for instance, large sums of money in an air conditioned room, there is no way it will not make news anywhere in the world.

    “So, this whole idea of trying to legitimise corruption is definitely being fueled and sponsored by those who have these resources, those who have stolen funds.

    “Unless we see it as a problem that can bring down our system, then we will never be able to fight it. I hope we will be able to advance this other African countries., “

    He also pointed out that the report of the Thabo Mbeki’s High level panel on illicit financial flows” showed that Nigeria accounts for most of the illicit funds flow that comes out of Africa.

    Osinbajo said: “And that shows us very clearly, especially security agencies that we simply have to do more. It is evident that so much money is leaving our shores.”

    Recalling an encounter with a friend, he said: “- I was arguing with somebody about the fact that they were stopping certain funding, and he kept telling me Nigeria is no longer a poor country but now a mid-income earning country so, they shouldn’t be giving us those kinds of aids.

    “It was barely a week after that a large sum of money was found at the Kaduna airport and it was roughly about half of the money we were looking for.

    “So, he sent me a text telling me that the money has been discovered at Kaduna. Of course I didn’t reply him but, when he persisted and I called him and asked if this was his own form of a joke.

    “But clearly, it is sometimes absurd that when we are asking for aid and so much money are being stolen. So, we ourselves must take responsibility and ensure we keep talking about this.”

    In his remark, Justice Minister & Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr Abubakar Malami, said Nigeria had signed accords to ease investigation, tracking and return of stolen assets.

    Malami said the country needed global support in those directions.

    “The commitment to curb corruption is rooted in all programmes of the Muhammadu Buhari administration. The return of the country’s stolen assets will help Nigeria to quickly overcome recession”, Malami said.

    In his keynote address, the Chairperson of International Anti-Corruption Conference Council, Akere Muna, called for a meeting to consider the recommendations in the Thabo Mbeki panel Report.

    Muna is the Sanctions Commissioner at the African Development Bank (AfDB) and a member of the Mbeki-led High level panel on illicit financial flows from Africa.

    Pushing for the creation of escrow accounts within AfDB, he said that frozen funds should not be allowed to domicile in complicit banks, but in an escrow account with a third party, pending the courts’ or competent authorities’ determination  as  to the rightful owners of the funds.

    He said: “I have seen, in the context document prepared for the meeting, the issue of the management of recovered funds. I personally resent the fact that people who were complicit in the theft should turn around and start laying down conditionalities for the recovery of the same assets.

    “Funds, whether recovered or still in the government coffers should not be stolen, period.  The fact that for budgeting reasons, these may be earmarked for specific projects and under certain criteria, like the state or region from which the funds were stolen, is entirely a different matter for the countries themselves to decide in all sovereignty.

    “All I have said underpins the fact that the fight is global and must necessarily be engaged by the originating countries and the destination countries with the same vigor”, Muna said.

    He commended the President Buhari administration for making the fight against corruption its number one priority. Osinbajo stood him for the President.

    His words: “The simple fact of your presence here is witness to this. It is not an easy choice. As you know or must have found out by now, when you fight corruption, it fights back.

    “The fight against corruption in our continent is indeed the fight for the soul of Africa. How much longer will we watch our resources depleted and the future of our children mortgaged for the sake of a greedy few?”

    Stressing that the winds of change are blowing across the African continent, he said that the young people, who know better and want better, deserve better.

    “For those who feel that their own personal interest can always take precedence over that of their people, they should take a good look at history. We can certainly hide to do certain things, but it is certain that we will never be able to always hide the things we do”, he submitted.

    He went further: “For illicit financial flows to be tracked, he said, that there is need to know how they move.  To recuperate them, we need to know where these flows are parked.”

    According to him, Transparency International (TI) research published in March 2017 looked at 10 key anti-money laundering measures for the real estate sector in four key markets, and found that Australia and the United States (U.S.) had severe deficiencies across their entire real estate sector.

    He said: “In December last year, TI Canada found that of the  100  priciest homes in Vancouver, 46 were owned through offshore shell companies, trusts and nominees.

    “In March (this year), TI UK looked at new developments in London worth 1.6 billion pounds  and found that four in 10  homes have been sold to investors from high corruption-risk countries or those hiding behind anonymous companies.

    “In April, TI Brazil found that in Sao Paulo, Brazil, $2.7 billion in property has been linked to offshore companies.

    “In April, a TI Report on the luxury sector found that compliance by high-value good dealers with due diligence obligations is remarkably low. Legislation and policy also have weaknesses in the largest consumer luxury markets including the US, UK, France, China, Italy and Germany.

    “Time and again, large-scale corruption cases show that the proceeds are laundered through luxury assets from cars and super yachts to jewellery and art.

    “Think about the situation in Africa. I am sure many of you have noticed the sudden upturn in large-scale farming by people with no affinity to the soil, whatsoever.

    “The reason for this is that it is a sector which is labor intensive and in which almost every transaction is done in cash. What is exported or sold thereafter is from an identifiable source. I suppose this is one way to harvest the fruits of corruption and create a green economy!

    “It is still a mystery, what happens to funds between the time when they are frozen and the time when they are repatriated.

    The World Bank has an initiative known as StAR (Stolen Assets Recovery Initiative), which is supposed to deal with the theft of stolen assets from developing countries. If these assets are described as stolen, inevitably therefore those who are keeping those assets are handlers of stolen goods.

    He said it has no moral basis for assets to be frozen and still left in the hands of those who were complicit and are otherwise called handlers of stolen goods.

    “Handlers of stolen goods are as punishable as the thieves themselves. In certain countries, the handlers even get a more severe punishment than the thieves,” he stated.

    What the law says

    THE Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), as part of its regulatory mandates, works closely with all the core regulators of financial, other-financial institutions and designated non- financial businesses and professions.

    They include: Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) and Special Control Unit against Money Laundering (SCUML).

    Any transaction, particularly in the receipt of international transfer of funds and securities exceeding $10,000 or naira equivalent, must be reported to the NFIU as required by Section 2 (1) of the Money Laundering Prohibition (MLP) Act.

    The NFIU has the responsibility to receive reports on currency transactions; suspicious transactions; currency declaration and other information relating to money laundering and terrorist financing activities from financial institutions and designated non-financial institutions (DNFIs).

    The body is also expected to receive reports on cross-border movement of currency and monetary instruments.

    The Act stipulates that:

    • The Suspicious Transaction Reports mentioned under Section 6 (2) of the MLPA 2011 shall be reported by financial institutions exclusively to the NFIU to aid intelligence gathering and in line with Financial Action Task Force (FATF) 2012 Recommendations 20 and 29.
    • Declaration of more than $10,000 or its equivalent made to the Nigerian Customs pursuant to the Foreign Exchange Act, 1995 and Section 2 (3) of the MLP Act, 2011 as amended.

    The NFIU is expected to receive mandatory disclosures by financial institutions and any other individual (voluntarily) – related to single transaction, lodgment or transfer of funds in excess of N5, 000,000 or N1, 000,000 by an individual and N10, 000,000 or N5, 000,000 by a corporate entity as provided Section 10 (1) and (2), MLP Act.

    It has a mandate to determine the flow of transactions and the beneficiaries for individual and corporate accounts as provided by Section 14 MLP Act, 2011 as amended.

    Why CBN introduced BVN

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), in collaboration with the Bankers’ Committee, introduced the Bank Verification Number (BVN) to ensure unique identity for all bank customers and other users of financial services in the country by the use of their biometrics as means of identification.

    Every bank customer now has a BVN, which enables the CBN to unify and link the customer’s accounts across all the banks in the country.

    The BVN has also given every bank customer a unique identity across the banking industry, since it has a centralised biometric identification system which can be used for every identification and verification at Point of Banking Operations.

    The BVN is also accepted as a means of identification across all Nigerian banks; cuts down fraudulent activities on bank accounts and gives easy access to Banking operations.

  • ‘Suspected drug traffickers came through Ilorin Airport’

    ‘Suspected drug traffickers came through Ilorin Airport’

    The National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) has said most of the pilgrims arrested for alleged drug trafficking in last year’s hajj inSaudi Arabia came through the Ilorin International Airport.
    The commission, however, noted that it would not ban the airport from the 2017 hajj operations.
    NAHCON’s Head of Corporate Affairs, (Media Unit), Hajia Fatima Mustapha was fielding questions on the rumoured ban of the airport for hajj operations.
    She was in Ilorin with other national officers to visit a former director in the old Nigeria Pilgrims Commission, Abdulkadir Imam.
    Hajia Mustapha said the commission was not banning pilgrims from the airport, but would put in measures to checkmate drug trafficking.
    She hoped the move would address the challenges before the 2017 hajj begins.
    Her words: “It was discovered that most of the people arrested for drug trafficking in Saudi Arabia came from Kwara State. We are not saying they are Kwarans, but maybe there is connivance. Maybe the airport is porous, maybe the equipment are obsolete and cannot detect drug.”
    She said the commission was collaborating with the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), National Orientation Agency (NOA) and other relevant agencies to enlighten intending pilgrims on illegal practices they must shun.
    “A drama on the dangers and ills associated with drug trafficking will be staged during enlightenment campaigns for intending pilgrims,” she added.
    Hajia Mustapha hinted that the commission would embark on e-registration of pilgrims to beat those who might want to engage in sharp practices.
    To ensure a hitch-free 2017 exercise, Mustapha said the chairman will soon embark on pre-hajj visit to Saudi Arabia to start preparation on accommodation, transportation and other challenges experienced during the last hajj.