Tag: Marijuana

  • Dangers of smoking marijuana, colos, other substances

    Dangers of smoking marijuana, colos, other substances

    In recent years, there has been a growing movement to legalize marijuana for medical and recreational use. While there are some potential health benefits associated with marijuana, such as pain relief and reduced anxiety, it is important to be aware of the dangers that come with its use.

    Furthermore, smoking marijuana can have negative effects on physical health. The smoke from marijuana contains many of the same harmful chemicals found in the tobacco smoke, including carbon monoxide and tar. This can increase the risk of respiratory issues such as lung cancer.

    Similarly, the use of cocaine can have devastating consequences for both physical and mental health. cocaine is a highly addictive drug that can lead to tolerance, dependence and addiction in a short period of time.

    In addition to the health risk associated with marijuana and cocaine use, there are also social and legal consequences to consider. Drug addiction can lead to financial difficulties, strained relationships with families and friends, and legal troubles.

    It is important to be aware of the dangers of smoking marijuana, colos and cocaine and other illegal substances.

    The dangers of smoking marijuana, cocaine and other illegal substances are numerous and varied.

    Here are some of the key risks associated with each drug:

    MARIJUANA:

    1. Mental health issues: Regular use of marijuana can lead to increased risk of developing anxiety, depression and psychosis. It can also impair cognitive function, memory and decision making skills.

    2. Physical health concerns: Smoking marijuana can damage the lungs, leading to respiratory issues such as bronchitis and lung cancer, long-term use can also decrease lung function and increase the risk of cardiovascular disease.

    3. Negative effects on pregnancy: Pregnant women who smoke marijuana may be at risk of complications such as low birth weight, premature birth and developmental issues in their baby.

    COCAINE:

    1. Addiction and dependence: Cocaine is a highly addictive drug that can lead to tolerance, dependence and addiction in a short period of time.

    2. Physical health problems: Chronic cocaine use can cause damage to the heart, liver and kidneys. It can also increase the risk of stroke, heart attack and other cardiovascular issues.

    3. Mental health complications: Cocaine use has been linked to anxiety, depression, paranoia and psychosis.

    OTHER ILLEGAL SUBSTANCES:

    1. Addiction: Many illegal substances such as heroin and ecstasy are highly addictive and can lead to serve physical and psychological dependence.

    2. Overdose: The potency and purity of illegal drugs can vary greatly, increasing the risk of accidental overdose and death.

    Read Also: Navy hands over N120m Marijuana to NDLEA

    3. Legal consequences: Possession, distribution and use of illegal substances are against the law and can result in criminal charges, fines and jail time.

    Overall, the dangers of smoking marijuana, cocaine and other illegal substances include physical health risk, mental health complications, addiction and dependence overdose and legal consequences. it’s important to be aware of these risks and seek help if you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse. Prevention, education and access to treatment are essential in addressing the dangers of drug use in our communities.

  • 24-year-old commits suicide after overdose of marijuana

    Twenty-four-year-old Ebube Chukwu from Ameke Enu Oduma in Aninri Local Government Area of Enugu State has committed suicide after an overdose of marijuana.

    The Police Command in Enugu State said it has commenced investigation into the incident.

    Spokesman of the command, SP. Ebere Amaraizu, in a statement yesterday in Enugu, said the incident happened on Aug. 22 at Ameke Village in Enu-Oduma Community in the Aninri Local Government Area of Enugu State.

    He stated the victim allegedly committed the act by hanging himself on top of a tree inside the forest at Obokolo between Amorji and Ameke Oduma Boundary all in Aninri Local Government Area of the state.

    He said that Chukwu was reported to have committed suicide after taking his usual and hourly wraps of marijuana, popularly called ‘Igbo’.

    Amaraizu said: “It was further gathered that the victim was always in the habit of smoking marijuana and which may have caused the unfortunate incident.”

     

  • Neighbourhood Watch recovers 33 bags of ‘Marijuana’

    Officials of the Lagos Neighbourhood Safety Corps (LNSC) at the weekend arrested 48 suspected drug peddlers and recovered 33 bags of substances suspected to be Marijuana.

    The suspects were rounded up during a raid of illicit drug dens in Lagos Island, the agency’s spokesman, Olawale Afolabi said in a statement yesterday.

    According to Afolabi, areas raided included Patey Street, Obalende and Adeniji-Adele.

    He said the raid, which was carried out on Friday night, followed intelligence report that hoodlums were going about the illegal business in the areas unchecked.

    Afolabi said: “It was the first time such a raid was carried out in the areas. For 12 hours, officials of the LNSC and the police from Area A raided the neighbourhoods, hitherto referred to as lion’s den. Security operatives usually avoid going to the areas. LNSC was able to achieve this through intelligence gathering.

    “At the end of the raid, LNSC had 48 adult suspects in its net and also recovered 33 bags of marijuana. The suspects and the exhibits were handed over to the Lagos State Taskforce for further action.”

  • I smuggle marijuana because I cannot engage in robbery – Suspect

    A 43-year-old man Okafor Secopter has told police that he ventured into smuggling of marijuana (Indian hemp) in Lagos, because he could not do armed robbery.

    Police sources said the suspect was arrested by the Operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) while on routine patrol at Isheri Berger area of Lagos, on August 28, 2017.

    It was learnt that Okafor was intercepted with a Ghana-must-go bag at Isheri Berger area which contained Indian hemp weighing over 20 kilogramme.

    The suspect allegedly confessed to the ownership of the hard drug.

    Confessing, Okafor said:  “I am a smuggler. I was into smuggling business. I used to smuggle marijuana because I cannot do armed robbery job. Smuggling is the only business I know how to do well.

    The country is too tough and rough. I cannot kill my fellow human beings to get money. Leave matter for Mathias. I cannot do armed robbery and I cannot do kidnapping. I do not have the mind to do obtaining by false pretense aka 419 or big fraud. I cannot operate dangerous gun.

    I am hustling to get what I and my family will eat. It is not a crime. I have to take care of my family.

    “I was buying and selling foreign rice before the government banned foreign rice importation. As if that was not enough, the bags of rice in my shop were seized and for me to survive I started smuggling marijuana. I used to buy it from Benin, Edo State. It was when I was carrying the bag of Indian hemp to Lagos that police on patrol saw me at Isheri Berger area and stopped me. When they opened the bag to know what I was carrying they saw marijuana and they said I was under arrest. It is not my fault. The country is tough.

  • International day against drug abuse and illicit trafficking

    International day against drug abuse and illicit trafficking

    There is no argument about the fact that drug abuse and illicit trafficking of substances is a worldwide feeling of discomfort that has a far-reaching consequence because it is fraught with crime, corruption and terrorism. We can observe that Nigeria has the highest consumption of illicit drugs. Due to the invention of new technologies, the production of these drugs has increase which makes them to become very cheap and therefore affordable.

    International day against drug abuse and illicit trafficking is a day set aside to raise awareness to major problems that the unlawful use and distribution of drugs portends for the society.

    The International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking serves to draw awareness to the need for action and cooperation in order to achieve a drug-free world.  Illicit drugs and their trafficking pose a large health threat to humanity. Drug problems and dependencies put a great deal of pressure on health care systems and constitute a threat to the safety and well-being of humans all around the globe.

    Long-term drug abuse has been linked to poor general health, contraction of diseases through needle sharing, trouble with the law, poor self-hygiene, alienation from loved ones, psychological illnesses and death from overdose.

    In December 1987, the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking was designated by the United Nations. It is celebrated annually on June 26, a symbolic day that commemorates the dismantling of the opium trade in Guangdong. The day also serves as an opportunity for Member Nations to reaffirm their support for UN Conventions that attempt to control the world’s drug supply.

    Drug abuse according to Wikipedia is a patterned use of a drug in which the user consumes the substance in amount or with methods which are harmful to themselves. Drug abuse can also be associated with taking overdose of a drug. Examples of abused drugs include: cocaine, heroin, marijuana, prescription drugs, including opioids.

    Illicit trafficking on the other hand is an illegal trading, selling or dealing in specified goods.

    ‘Health’ is the ongoing theme of the world drug campaign. According to the United Nations report, the value of illegal drugs traded around the world is put at more than $32billion yearly. According to this statistics, we can see that drug abuse and trafficking is a problem and major deterrent to humanity and the wellbeing of the youths in particular.

    The most surprising thing is the increasing number of secondary school and tertiary institution students taken to consuming hard drugs. Other groups of individuals susceptible to drug abuse are drivers, conductors, artists, musicians, etc.

    Considering the biological implications of drug abuse, it is pertinent that we understand not only the injurious effect of substance abuse to our organs, but also to unborn children at the fetal stage. An expectant mother who is taken to drug abuse might be causing more harm than good to her unborn child.

    Psychosocially, drug abuse destroys families progressively; once a member of a family becomes overtly addicted to drug (especially psychedelic drugs), he or she begins to act irrationally. This can prove huge danger for those around them, as there are a plethora of stories of siblings hurting each other due to drug abuse.

    The consequences of drug abuse have been violence, rape, suicide, poor academic performance, poor health condition, school dropout etc. Drug abuse is associated with vices such as cultism, armed robbery, thuggery, etc.

    Conclusively, it is expedient that government (federal and state), and all their policy wonks should begin to not only pass laws to curb the preponderance of drug abuse, but also, to enforce the extant laws on substance abuse.

    Parents are also to play key roles in the educational progress of their children through effective communication with the children and with the help of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and other paraphernalia of government like NAFDAC, NDLEA, and Human right groups. Investing more on technological devices that can enhance the ability to detect hard drug traffickers is also advisable.

     

  • MARIJUANA WAR! NDLEA in running battle with  billionaire Indian hemp farmers

    MARIJUANA WAR! NDLEA in running battle with billionaire Indian hemp farmers

    The journey was risky, the environment hostile and the terrain inaccessible. For weeks, SINA FADARE was on the trails of cannabis farmers in the jungle of government forest reserves in the South West states. In this report, he observes that the battle of the National Drugs Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) against drug peddling is far from being won and the country, indeed, sits on a keg of gun powder.

    Ogbese/Owo, Ogotun, Ikoyi and Olohunde villages in Ondo, Ekiti, Osun and Oyo states respectively have a lot in common. They are the havens of Indian hemp farmers in Nigeria. Immediately you enter any of these villages, the word ‘farmer’, which normally means somebody who produces food or cash crops like yam, beans, maize and cocoa, takes on a new meaning. In the aforementioned villages, the word ‘farmer’ mostly refers to Indian hemp growers.

    Another feature of the areas is that government-owned forest reserves, which cut across all the states in the South-West (Ondo, Osun, Oyo, Ogun and Ekiti) pass through these villages and link up states like, Edo, Delta, Kwara, Kogi and Lagos. The proximity of the thick vegetation of the aforementioned places thus makes it a tempting field for hemp planters.

    The environment has a thick vegetation, sloppy and undulating terrain and rich and fertile soil that has not been used for farming for many years due to lack of access points. The green vegetation oozes smoke from the hills when viewed with the binocular. Welcome to the cannabis empire.

    The Nation investigation revealed that the most notorious sites for hemp cultivation in the country are found in Ipele, Ita-Ogbolu, Owo and Ogbese forest reserves in Ondo State; Ogotun, Ise-Orun, Ikogosi, Emure, Egbe and little Ose forest reserves in Ekiti State; Ikoyi, Orita Ijebu and Gbongan forest reserve in Ayedade Local Government Area of Osun State and Olohunde, Seriki and Gambari forest reserves in Oyo State.

    In 2014 alone, The Nation gathered, hemp farmers in Osun State had pumper harvests that tasked the NDLEA to no end. The agency was said to have employed the services of a tractor to destroy about 57 hectares of cannabis farm in Ikoyi area of the state with a street value of about N6.8 billion.

    The operation, which lasted for three days from October 9 to 12, involved all the arsenals of the NDLEA. A suspected drug baron, Godspower Chibogu, who allegedly funded the cultivation of the cannabis plantation, was traced to his private home in Ibadan, Oyo State, where he was apprehended and taken to the farm to witness its destruction.

    Speaking on the major breakthrough, the then chairman of NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade, said the agency had to take the step in response to the growing magnitude of cannabis cultivation in the area.

    He said: “This is the first time the NDLEA is engaging the service of a tractor in the destruction of cannabis farms. The farms are so large that it takes several days and weeks to destroy manually. Deploying heavy duty equipment to the farms makes the task simpler and faster.”

    Similarly, the Orita Ijebu forest reserve in Ikoyi area of the state was also raided in 2016 by the NDLEA where 27 camps used as storage facilities for cannabis was located. The cannabis retrieved from this location was put at about N300 million.

    The use of tractors for the destruction of such farms was not peculiar to Osun. The NDLEA in Oyo State took a similar step in 2016 when Gambari forest became a recurrent decimal in cannabis planting. About 27 hectares of cannabis plantations were destroyed with a street value of about N2.3 billion.

    On how the menace was tackled, the agency’s commander, Mrs.Omolade Faboyede, said: “We have been monitoring the reserve and it was noticed that the planters were back to business. This prompted the bringing in of tractors to clear the expansive plantation. It will be a continuous exercise until the whole place is rid of cannabis plants.”

    Speaking to this reporter on the volume of cannabis destroyed by the NDLEA between 2011 and 2015, the National Public Relations Officer of the agency, Mr. Mitchell Ofoyeju, said about 8,076.03 hectares of cannabis farms had been destroyed. The street value of this is going to about N963 billion. According to him, the agency was able to achieve this due to the doggedness and determination of its officials despite the numerous challenges it faces.

     

    Call for national emergency

    However, a Deputy Director in the NDLEA, who spoke to our reporter on condition of anonymity, said as laudable as the breakthrough of the agency may be, given the volume of unidentified cannabis farms, particularly in the South West of the country, and the volume that finds itself in the open market through the barons, it is better to declare a national emergency on the issue.

    He said: “This is not a matter of exaggeration, because in some cases, particularly in Ondo and Ekiti states where the terrains are inaccessible, the quantity of weeds stored in various hidden locations aside the ones on various farms which poor funding has prevented the organisation from identifying, the country is sitting dangerously on a keg of gun powder.”

    Worried by the high population of cannabis farmers in the South West, NDLEA’s chief executive, Col. Muhammad Abdallah (rtd), noted that “unless the current trend of cannabis cultivation is addressed, the country is on the verge of a devastating food security. It is worrisome that the cartels are using government forest reserves to cultivate cannabis.”

    According to Food and Agriculture Organisations of the United Nations (FAO), between 2000 and 2005, Nigeria recorded the largest deforestation rate in the world, having lost 55.7 per cent of their primary forest. More worrisome, it noted, was the fact that close to 904,100 hectares of forest land had been lost.

    The Nation gathered that Indian hemp farmers are among the culprits of deforestation. Thousands of forest reserves are destroyed to make way for their illicit venture. Cannabis is planted far away from the eagle eyes of law enforcement agencies.

     

    Dynamics of hemp planting business in forest reserves

    Papa Michael, as he was fondly called by neighbours and admirers in Ore, a town in Odigbo Local Government Area, Ondo State, was a famous hemp farmer. According to him, there was virtually nobody in the area who did not know him because of his popularity. He knew what it entailed to survive in cannabis farming.

    According to him, for about 35 years, he had a beautiful romance with cannabis, which he usually calls weed. The gap toothed, petite innocent-looking man in his late 70s could not forget in a hurry his involvement in illegal cannabis business for several years. For this, he was detained in various police cells many times.

    A native of Amuno, Kwale area of Delta State, before he relocated to Ogbese and later settled in Ore when he was barely 25 years old. “I came to Yoruba land through a friend when l could not make success of my transport business then. I used to work for a man in our area who had a large farm of hemp plantation. Each time he was in police or NDLEA net, I used to take charge of his farm,” he recalled.

    Papa Michael, who said he never felt he was doing anything unusual, said: “Weed is a spiritual vegetable. I don’t know why you people are disturbing yourselves about it. That was the only business l did for about 35 years before age told me to stop. Twice l collapsed on the farm and my family, particularly my children, said enough was enough. That is why you see me now doing my vulcanizing job to make ends meet.”

    Explaining why the business is done in forest reserves, the father of five children said: “My people are many here and l doubt if they can do any other job. All these areas (referring to Ondo, Ekiti, Osun and Oyo) have good soils that are very good for weed. If you get about 10 bags of weed from a hectare of land in my area (Delta), the same hectare of land will give you about 50 bags here. If you are the one, will you leave such a place?” he queried.

    From Papa Michael’s explanation, it is easy to see why the South West is usually invaded by Indian hemp farmers from other parts of the country and would not leave in a hurry no matter the circumstances. The Nation investigation revealed that cannabis barons have integrated in the aforementioned states so much so that they have formed a syndicate that is very rich and ready to wage a serious war against any government agency that poses a threat to their illicit business.

    It was gathered that in Ondo State, for instance, cannabis farmers have an association called Akunnubas, a name derived from Kwale language. There is an executive that runs the affairs of this association and pull resources together if need be to achieve its desired goal. Through this association, they map out their operational strategies on how to beat security agencies in transferring processed cannabis from the state to other parts of the country as well as for export.

    Their operations are seriously coded for security reasons and they employ some members of a militant group as their own internal security. The militants on their pay roll are to gather information concerning the NDLEA and the police. The Nation gathered that they are effective in this job to the extent that they have percolated the security agencies such that their strategies at security meetings are divulged to the executive members who then take the necessary step for safe landing of their produce. Although this costs a lot of money, it is always jointly funded by all members of the association.

    The Nation investigation revealed that this association also links up with others states in the South West while Akure, the capital of Ondo State, is the headquarters where all operational activities, including the control of cannabis price per bag, are dictated. In the same manner, the Akunubas link up with Delta State where most of the barons and financers come from to control the price and coordinate the market for the maximization of profit.

    The Nation also gathered that resources are pulled together by the organisation to have a notable nursery where cannabis are initially planted and watered to maturity before it is transferred to a larger farm. Aside this, during harvest period, which normally takes up to two or three months depending on the size of the farm, the service of a chopper is usually engaged to drop food and drinks for the people on the farm because of the difficult terrain and to avoid the eagle eyes of security operatives

    A bag of cannabis, according to investigation, sells for about N180,000. If a baron with a large farm is able to deliver all his harvest to the end user without any difficulty, he would be smiling to the bank with as much as N500 million.

    Speaking with our correspondent in his office at Alagbaka area of Akure, NDLEA Commander, Alhaji. Mohammed Malami Sokoto, who confirmed the activities of Akunnubas, said they are an organised crime syndicate. According to him, recently the command arrested the body’s vice chairman (name withheld), who incidentally was the son of the soil.

    “They are so organised that they use a pseudo name to avoid being nabbed, and the name was coined from Kwale language. Their chairman, who is now at large, is from Kwale, while his deputy is from Ondo State. We have charged him to court but he was released on bail. After his arrest, the group is now in disarray,” he said.

    Sokoto explained that the organised crime is always coordinated and extremely coded. “It is an established, organised crime. The one who farms on the land and plants the cannabis sometimes does not really know the real owner. There is a middle man that runs errand between those that tilt the land and the farm manager and the owner of the cannabis. Each time you make an arrest on the farm, he cannot give you any useful information concerning the real owner of the farm.

    Giving an insight into the operation of the cannabis business, the NDLEA boss said “There is usually a disconnect between the person farming on the land and the baron that owns it. The baron does not know those that are working on his farm and vice versa. The middle man is the farm manager who most of the time has no fixed address. All of them know the middle man, but it is difficult to nab him. We call them middle baron.

    “The dynamics of it is that the middle man runs on proxy. He will just recruit men to work on the farm and disappear. They have an association they gave a pseudo name which nobody can identify. The funny thing is that those who actually own the business are not the people from the state, but some Kwale people from Delta State who have a link with the Omo onile(sons of the soil)”.

    Explaining the challenges confronting the command in combating deadly drug barons, Sokoto explained that “there are environmental threats and poor logistics in accessing the farm. At times, it takes two days. There was a time we went for such an operation and by the time we are through, the bridge that we came through had been dismantled.

    “Sometimes, to communicate with them is not possible. Operation is timely so we have to do a back-up team to avoid a calamity. It is in a jungle where telephone network is not feasible.”

    Besides poor funding which is the major problem of NDLEA as an agency of government, the Ondo command headquarters was littered with heaps of cannabis. The seized vehicles in the compound and the three stores were filled to capacity. To this, Sokoto explained that there was about 100 tons of cannabis in their custody waiting to be destroyed as soon as the National Assembly approved it.

    “There is the latest development concerning some of our seizures. Though we have a court injunction to destroy it, the National Assembly must give us the go ahead,” he said

     

    Cannabis barons’ mode of operation

    To beat the law enforcement agencies, a lot of organised strategies are employed by the barons to carry their produce to the end user. The Nation gathered that cannabis consignments are compressed, packaged like a book parcel and carried in a normal vehicle without anybody except a trained NDLEA official knowing what it is. This type of package is called ‘the bible’ in security circle.

    Aside this, cannabis are tucked in specialised trunks with half of it opened on the roof and the produce is packed and then sealed up. This is later dismantled when it gets to its final destination.

    While taking the reporter round to see some of the seizures made at the Ondo Command, the Assistant Commander in charge of operation and intelligence, who did not want his name in print, said a lot of methods are used by barons to deceive security agencies, including petrol tankers, ambulances, toilet cans, soft drink cartons and tipper lorries loaded with granite.

    Papa Michael said packaging weed requires a lot of experience and networking. He said: “There are various methods the operators use, which l cannot tell you. But the fact is that once the weed is ready, it will definitely get to the end users. I can pack it like baby wear or like Okrika (second hand) clothes. My brother, it is brain work.”

    Like any other business with its hazards, the barons may not always succeed in bribing their ways through the checkpoints. Such goods are confiscated by the NDLEA. At times, through intelligence gathering, the goods are seized at various warehouses. But such seizures are just a like a drop of water in the ocean compared to those that find their ways to the open market or outside the country.

    The Nation also gathered that what makes the business of cannabis more complicated is that it has two end chains, meaning it can be exported and at the same time imported. According to an NDLEA source, the imported ones are using Nigeria as transit route to other destinations within and outside the country.

    The reporter was shocked at Ogotun village in Ekiti when the son of a prominent cocoa farmer in the area said that during harvesting periods, the barons use chopper to drop food and evacuate finished products from the jungle.

    A graduate of Economics who did not want his name in print said: “On numerous occasions when we go into the deep forest to hunt for games, we see choppers hovering in the air and dropping food for cannabis harvesters. Sometimes, they do that three times in a day,” he said.

     

    Why government-owned forest reserves?

    Speaking to The Nation in his office in Osogbo, Osun State, the Assistant Commander in charge of operations, Mr. Julius Dzer, noted that government forest reserves are the targets of cannabis farmers because of its numerous advantages to their illicit business.

    According to him, “More than 95 per cent of the people planting cannabis in the South West are from Delta State. They have to come here because the land is fertile and friendly with the weed. If you take a modus of hemp seed and plant it in Delta, it will give you between 15 and 20 bags, while it will give you more than 50 bags here.

    “Secondly, the land is fertile and the quality of the hemp produced is enhanced, far better than what you have in other areas. The best weather and soil that accommodate hemp is here in the South West. They take cover in the forest because it is wide and deep. This cannot be easily accessible to security agencies.”

    Dzer, who has led various operations against the barons, pointed out that because of the difficult terrain which most of the forest reserves occupy, coupled with the fact that the land belongs to the government and nobody can lay serious claim to it except a few Omo Onile who are majorly settled, cannabis farmers seek solace in this jungle to perpetrate their crime.

    Thinking along the same line, an NDLEA official who did not want his name in print, said that 90 per cent of the cannabis planted in the country and exported are cultivated in various forest reserves because the soils are not only fertile but far away from the prying eyes of security agencies.

    He explained that most of the lands have not been used for farming at all. “As such, cannabis produced here is said to be one of the best in the world. Therefore, the barons may not be in a hurry to abandon such an environment unless they are rooted out by force.”

    The Nation gathered that the barons also prefer the forest reserves because they (forest reserves) give them natural protection from the security agencies as it would take many months of operational planning and huge mobilisation before security agents can beat them to the game.

    Sharing his experience during the destruction of 68 acres of cannabis farm at Gambari forest in Ibadan, Oyo State, on September 11, 2016, NDLEA Director of Operations and General Investigation, Mr. Mabo Olugbenga, who led the operation, noted that gaining access into the place was a huge challenge.

    He said: “The team drove from Ibadan through several villages like Iki-Oke Alayo village, Idi Ayunre and several communities before getting to the forest. The bush paths were rough with streams and swampy areas making movement extremely difficult.”

    Olugbenga, who described the place as an “evil forest”, explained that the cannabis farm which was worth millions of naira was discovered through intelligence reports.

    Speaking in the same vein, an operation officer with the Ondo Command, who did not want his name in print, said the major headache of the agency was the inaccessible terrains where the cannabis plantations are located.

    He said: “In one of our previous operations, we left the office in Akure around midnight and did not get to the jungle until 2 am. After our vehicles were packed because of the swampy terrain, we had to trek another three hours before we could get to the farm. We were virtually lost in the jungle because we could not communicate with our base any longer. For two days, we were more or less in the wilderness.”

  • Of drug war and marijuana’s business value

    Of drug war and marijuana’s business value

    As the youth grow up, they are warned about the “dangers” of marijuana and other substances. The supposed danger, as echoed by many, is that marijuana makes people become unkempt, irresponsible, lazy and ultimately, running-on-the-streets-naked (that is, madness). Some religious preachers go as far as to say that marijuana users are hell-bound. Since the 1950s, thousands have been jailed; countless properties have been confiscated by the government, and taxpayers’ money has been wasted on the war on drugs in Nigeria, through the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

    Marijuana is a medical plant grown in various states across the country, mostly in the southwest of Nigeria, where the land is arable and fertile for agriculture. The popular belief is that, the plant was brought into the country by soldiers returning from World War II, who had access to marijuana seed via the Far East and North Africa. When the international community embarked on the war on drugs, our government introduced laws banning the cultivation, use and trade of marijuana.

    To date, these laws have thrown many citizens into jail, forced private property confiscation, and created discrimination against individuals who might only have a seed in their possession. Gradually, these discriminatory laws have influenced our culture, and now marijuana users are regarded as the scum of the society. Criminal activities like rape, robbery, kidnapping, and militancy are associated with marijuana and this has created the impression that anyone who takes the drug must be a criminal. More often than not, users are the first suspect in any criminal case, often wrongfully so.

    Where has this led us? The police carry out aggressive raids in communities where marijuana users live, often just to extort them. At checkpoints, anyone found in possession of even a seed of marijuana is automatically stripped of his rights, and if he “talks too much”, he would be beaten black and blue by law enforcement agents.

    Nigerians, especially human rights activists, rarely speak out on the brutalisation and dehumanisation of marijuana users in the country. And if one dares to speak out, it is first alleged that he must be a user, before being sent on discriminatory path.

    A politician accused of embezzling public funds in mind-boggling proportion can appear in court with 70 Senior Advocates in tow, but such act would not be excused if the case has to do with marijuana, a plant. Rather, junior lawyers take charge knowing full well that, because of the strict law in place, the accused is already guilty as charged.

    We need to review the laws surrounding marijuana usage in Nigeria, so we can reduce the number of individuals – especially young people – being jailed for the intake of a plant. In countries, such as The Netherlands and Spain, the use of marijuana for recreational purposes is tolerated. In a country that promotes agriculture as a major economic sector, hectares of land belonging to individuals in Ondo, Osun, Oyo, Edo, Kaduna and Plateau states have been seized by the government.

    As free people who are no longer under colonial control, why should the government decide what one grows on his farmland? Farmers are still required by law to pay taxes on their profits, and when there is no business for them, they’ll turn to other crops or different industries.

    Nigeria, being a producer of high-potency marijuana can profit from the marijuana business by increasing exports to countries with deficit of marijuana farming. For a country with a lot of traditional medical practitioners, the use of marijuana can also be encouraged with the lifting of the ban on the use of the plant.

    Our politicians, lawmakers, and civil servants are quick to brandish academic certificates on leadership and management, but none on public/consumer choice. It is as simple as it sounds. Individuals should be free to choose what they want for themselves and this, in turn, encourages production of goods and services.

    If we are truly equal before the law, no one should be made an outcast because they choose to grow or use marijuana. There is no discrimination for people who eat fatty foods, or consume alcohol.

    The freedom of Nigerians to choose what works for them should not be restricted to elections alone. The consumers should also have the liberty to choose what they consume, what they grow, and which business to go into, with the marijuana industry being one of them.

    Chukwuemeka Ezeugo is the Programmes Associate of African Students For Liberty

     

  • Tonto Dikeh abuses alcohol and marijuana, husband reveals

    Tonto Dikeh abuses alcohol and marijuana, husband reveals

    Dr Olakunle Churchill, the estranged husband of Nollywood actress, Tonto Dikeh, has blasted the latter, saying she abuses alcohol, marijuana and is temperamental.
    Churchill, a Ghana-based businessman and owner of Big Church Group of companies said this in an interview with Media Room Hub TV published over the weekend.
    About a fortnight earlier, Tonto had granted the same station an interview where she lambasted Churchill for domestic violence among other things.
    Relaying the incident which happened in Ghana, Churchill said he picked her from the airport a day before her birthday in 2015. However, due to a misunderstanding she spent the night in a hotel. He said Tonto came to his house the next day in the afternoon and “started breaking everything in the house. Luckily for me, I switched off the electric fence wire before I left the house. So, she started from the electric fence.”
    Churchill said she destroyed many things in his house.
    “There is this thing about my wife. It’s just like crisis. It doesn’t stop for like two, two and half hours. I’m sorry about this but I have to say it.”
    Explaining what he means by ‘crisis,’ Churchill said, “she gets too temperamental due to her negative intakes. I don’t know. I don’t want to say anything about that but it got to that point.”
    Churchill however, continued and clarified, “alcohol abuse, negative, marijuana, negative, anything that has something to do with drugs. When you’re always on a trip.”
    Churchill said her anger erupted as she was rude to the police officials and even spat on one of the police officers.
    “When her anger starts, six men can’t hold Tonto down, talk less of me beating Tonto. It’s not possible. She uses everything she has. Everything I have, she destroyed everything to zero.”
    Churchill also dismissed as lies that he didn’t buy Tonto luxury gifts, saying he had receipts to everything.
    Churchill revealed that he met Tonto about two and half years at his brother’s birthday party and they exchanged contacts. He said Tonto got pregnant for him six months later and he decided to marry her.
    The couple have a one-year old son named King.
    In February, Tonto revealed that there were cracks in her marriage via an open letter on Instagram.

  • Tonto Dikeh abuses alcohol and marijuana, husband reveals

    Tonto Dikeh abuses alcohol and marijuana, husband reveals

    Mr Olakunle Churchill, the estranged husband of Nollywood actress, Tonto Dikeh, has blasted the latter, saying she abuses alcohol, marijuana and is temperamental.

    Churchill, a Ghana-based businessman and owner of Big Church Group of companies said this in an interview with Media Room Hub TV published over the weekend.

    About a fortnight earlier, Tonto had granted the same station an interview where she lambasted Churchill for domestic violence among other things.

    Relaying the incident which happened in Ghana, Churchill said he picked her from the airport a day before her birthday in 2015. However, due to a misunderstanding she spent the night in a hotel. He said Tonto came to his house the next day in the afternoon and “started breaking everything in the house. Luckily for me, I switched off the electric fence wire before I left the house. So, she started from the electric fence.”

    Churchill said she destroyed many things in his house.

    “There is this thing about my wife. It’s just like crisis. It doesn’t stop for like two, two and half hours. I’m sorry about this but I have to say it.”

    Explaining what he means by ‘crisis,’ Churchill said, “she gets too temperamental due to her negative intakes. I don’t know. I don’t want to say anything about that but it got to that point.”

    Churchill however, continued and clarified, “alcohol abuse, negative, marijuana, negative, anything that has something to do with drugs. When you’re always on a trip.”

    Churchill said her anger erupted as she was rude to the police officials and even spat on one of the police officers.

    “When her anger starts, six men can’t hold Tonto down, talk less of me beating Tonto. It’s not possible. She uses everything she has. Everything I have, she destroyed everything to zero.”

    Churchill also dismissed as lies that he didn’t buy Tonto luxury gifts, saying he had receipts to everything.

    Churchill revealed that he met Tonto about two and half years at his brother’s birthday party and they exchanged contacts. He said Tonto got pregnant for him six months later and he decided to marry her.

    The couple have a one-year old son named King.

    In February, Tonto revealed that there were cracks in her marriage via an open letter on Instagram.

  • Navy intercepts 559kg of Carnabis, arrests three suspects

    Navy intercepts 559kg of Carnabis, arrests three suspects

    …Five others caught for illegal fishing

     

    Operatives of the Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) BEECROFT have arrested three suspected drug traffickers including a Beninnois, caught smuggling 559kgs of Carnabis Sativa (Marijuana) into Lagos.

    Nautey Akiti, 33, Jelili Anu, 25 and Kunnuyi Danului, 24 were arrested on February 5, at Ikare waterways, with 11 bags containing carefully packed dried weeds, with an estimated N10million street value.

    Handing over the suspects to officials of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) on Tuesday evening, the Commander, NNS BEECROFT, Commodore Maurice Eno said they were caught onboard a fibre boat, MY DESTINY.

    “The suspects, substance and the boat are being handed over to NDLEA for further investigation and possible prosecution. Our men onboard NNS KARADUWA also arrested a fishing trawler, FT STEPHANIE that was engaged in illegal fishing around the road stead on February 3.

    “It was discovered that the fishing permit of the vessel has expired as such, the vessel was not supposed to fish in Nigerian waters at the time it was caught. So, the five crew members on board could not give satisfactory explanation for their action and they were arrested.

    “The suspects-Theophilus Ibikunle, Oshaegbu Shedrack, Felix Ajigbo, Wasiu Lawal and Omotuole Orisameolowa- have been handed over to the Federal Department of Fisheries for further action.

    “In line with the mission of the Chief of the Naval Staff (CNS) Vice Admiral Ibok-Ette Ibas, I want to restate the resolve of NNS Beecroft to tackle all forms of criminalities in its area of operation.”

    However, the suspected drug traffickers denied knowing the content of the bags were Marijuana.

    They claimed they were contracted by one Amos to deliver the luggage around Ojo.

    Akiti claimed he was in the boat to collect his money from Anu, who asked him to assist in loading the boat.

    He said: “I am a fisherman. I am from Benin Republic but I live at Ikare. It was Jelili that told me to help him load the boat with the bags. After loading, I asked for my money but he said I should follow him so that the owner can pay me. I don’t know anything about it. If I knew it was drugs, I wouldn’t have followed them in the boat.”

    But Anu denied Akiti’s claim, insisting that it was Amos who called the latter.

    Anu said as a boat operator, he was offered N20,000 on charter basis to deliver the bags to an address in Ojo.

    He denied knowing the content.