Politics
NDLEA AND CRIMES OF MANY COLOURS*
By Emmanuel Nnadozie Onwubiko
Writers of movies in Nigeria need to look closely towards the methodology and the strategic approaches that operatives of the nation’s counter-narcotics agency NDLEA uses to track down clinically and arrests drug traffickers of different classifications. I believe a good copy written around the whole gamut of arrests of divergent genres of drug traffickers in Nigeria under the current dispensation can make a great movie. But what we are about to read is real life encounters by the NDLEA and not movies.
The underworld of hard drug trafficking is one of the most deceptive criminal ecosystems in contemporary society. Unlike conventional crimes that often reveal visible signs of violence or criminal intent, narcotics trafficking thrives on concealment, manipulation, disguise, and psychological deception. Drug traffickers have mastered the art of blending into society by assuming identities and appearances that ordinarily evoke sympathy, trust, or innocence.
In recent years, operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency have encountered a frightening spectrum of traffickers: elderly persons concealing narcotics beneath the cloak of age and frailty; women simulating pregnancy to evade suspicion; disabled individuals used as strategic shields against law enforcement scrutiny; and respectable professionals who secretly operate as couriers and coordinators in transnational trafficking syndicates.
This evolving complexity explains why the war against illicit drugs cannot be fought merely with brute force. It is a sophisticated battle of intelligence, psychology, behavioural analysis, surveillance, inter-agency collaboration, and criminological expertise. Under the leadership of Brigadier General Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd), the NDLEA has increasingly demonstrated that combating narcotics crimes requires more than arrests at airports and checkpoints. It demands the capacity to understand the criminal mind, predict behavioural patterns, infiltrate networks, analyse suspicious movements, and dismantle organized syndicates operating across national boundaries.
The multidimensional nature of drug crimes reflects the desperation and ingenuity of trafficking cartels. Criminologists have long argued that organized criminal enterprises constantly adapt to law enforcement tactics. This theory has proven accurate in the narcotics trade. Once traffickers realize that particular routes or methods are compromised, they rapidly evolve new concealment strategies. The use of pregnant disguises, for instance, is rooted in psychological manipulation. Society naturally accords pregnant women empathy and reduced scrutiny. Drug syndicates exploit this social conditioning. Similarly, elderly individuals are often perceived as harmless, vulnerable, or physically incapable of participating in sophisticated criminal activity. Persons living with disabilities may also receive less aggressive security checks because officers are expected to demonstrate compassion and sensitivity. Yet criminal syndicates weaponize these human emotions for operational advantage.
The implication is profound. Modern narcotics enforcement now operates at the intersection of criminal psychology and behavioural science. NDLEA operatives are increasingly trained not merely to search luggage but to read human behaviour. Microexpressions, inconsistent narratives, abnormal movement patterns, suspicious travel histories, excessive nervousness, rehearsed emotional displays, and deceptive body language now form critical components of narcotics detection. This explains why traffickers who appear physically innocent or socially respectable continue to be intercepted despite elaborate disguises.
What distinguishes the contemporary NDLEA under Marwa is the institutionalization of intelligence-led enforcement. The agency has moved beyond reactive policing into proactive criminal disruption. Arrest statistics emerging from the agency illustrate the scale of this transformation. Between 2021 and 2025, the NDLEA recorded 77,792 arrests, secured 14,225 convictions, and seized over 14.8 million kilograms of illicit substances, including cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, tramadol, and cannabis. The agency also arrested 128 identified drug barons involved in major trafficking syndicates.
These figures are not merely administrative achievements; they represent a significant disruption of organized criminal economies. Behind every seizure lies an intricate web of surveillance, profiling, undercover intelligence gathering, financial tracking, international information sharing, and operational coordination. Drug trafficking is rarely an isolated activity. It intersects with terrorism financing, money laundering, kidnapping, arms smuggling, cybercrime, and violent organized crime. Consequently, every successful narcotics operation contributes directly to national security preservation.
The criminological significance of these operations becomes even clearer when one considers the adaptive nature of organized crime. Drug syndicates survive through innovation. They constantly recruit individuals least likely to attract suspicion. Women pretending to be pregnant have been discovered carrying narcotics in prosthetic stomach packs. Elderly traffickers have concealed substances in food items, walking aids, and clothing materials. Some traffickers swallow drug pellets internally to evade external detection. Others hide illicit substances within electronic gadgets, automobile parts, religious materials, and even children’s belongings.
To uncover such schemes requires highly specialized operational skills. NDLEA officers now rely heavily on intelligence profiling, forensic interrogation, travel pattern analysis, digital surveillance, canine units, body scanners, controlled deliveries, and international watchlist coordination. Modern drug enforcement is therefore no longer dependent solely on random searches. It increasingly relies on predictive policing and criminal intelligence architecture.
This operational sophistication explains why many traffickers are often stunned when arrested. They assume their disguise automatically guarantees immunity from suspicion. Yet intelligence-driven policing works differently. The focus is not merely on physical appearance but on behavioural anomalies and network connections. A supposedly harmless traveller may suddenly attract attention because of suspicious ticket purchases, unusual destination patterns, inconsistent documentation, or intelligence supplied by foreign partners.
Indeed, one of the strongest pillars of the NDLEA’s successes under Marwa is the strengthening of inter-agency collaboration. No modern law enforcement institution can independently combat transnational organized crime. Drug trafficking networks transcend borders, jurisdictions, and institutional mandates. This reality has compelled the NDLEA to deepen operational cooperation with the Nigeria Customs Service, immigration authorities, the police, intelligence agencies, aviation security, financial regulators, and international anti-narcotics institutions.
The memorandum of understanding between the NDLEA and the Nigeria Customs Service represents one practical example of this evolving collaborative framework. The partnership enhanced intelligence sharing, border surveillance, coordinated seizures, and joint enforcement operations against illicit trafficking networks. Such institutional synergy significantly reduces operational rivalry while strengthening collective national security outcomes.
More importantly, the agency has strengthened transnational partnerships with organizations such as the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, European anti-narcotics institutions, and several foreign security agencies. These partnerships are indispensable because contemporary narcotics crimes operate through international supply chains. Cocaine may originate from Latin America, transit through West Africa, and ultimately target European or Asian markets. Synthetic drugs may be manufactured abroad and distributed through African corridors. Without international intelligence sharing, many trafficking networks would remain invisible.
General Marwa’s administration appears to understand that narcotics control is fundamentally global in character. The agency’s increasing engagement with foreign enforcement institutions has improved intelligence exchange, capacity building, technological support, operational training, and coordinated interdiction exercises. This globalized enforcement model has enabled the NDLEA to intercept trafficking operations before drugs even reach Nigerian territory or depart from it.
Equally noteworthy is the agency’s emphasis on professional training and human capacity development. Criminal networks evolve continuously; therefore, law enforcement competence must evolve faster. The modern NDLEA operative is no longer expected to function merely as a uniformed enforcer. He or she must understand criminal psychology, intelligence analysis, interrogation techniques, cyber-assisted investigations, financial tracking, and international legal procedures.
This explains why the agency increasingly appears several steps ahead of traffickers. Sophisticated narcotics detection requires analytical thinking and patience. Experienced officers study behavioural inconsistencies carefully. They observe how suspects respond under questioning, how they handle luggage, how they maintain eye contact, and how they react to routine screening. Often, it is not the physical evidence alone that exposes traffickers, but the collapse of carefully rehearsed deception under professional interrogation.
Criminology teaches that offenders frequently display what experts describe as “leakage behaviour”; involuntary psychological signs that betray concealed guilt. Properly trained narcotics officers understand these behavioural indicators. This knowledge transforms enforcement from random suspicion into scientific investigation.
The agency’s remarkable conviction record further underscores institutional maturity. Arrests alone do not dismantle organized crime. Successful prosecution and conviction create deterrence and weaken criminal networks structurally. The NDLEA’s 14,225 convictions within five years demonstrate increasing prosecutorial effectiveness and coordination within the criminal justice system. Convictions send a powerful message that narcotics crimes carry consequences beyond temporary detention.
Furthermore, the agency’s approach reflects an understanding that drug trafficking is not solely a criminal issue but also a public health and social stability concern. Drug abuse fuels violence, mental health deterioration, youth criminality, domestic instability, and economic decline. Organized narcotics trafficking also finances insecurity across multiple regions. Thus, the anti-drug war simultaneously functions as a national security strategy.
One of the most important lessons emerging from the NDLEA’s operational evolution is the value of intelligence-led policing. For decades, many African security institutions relied excessively on reactive enforcement. Criminals often stayed ahead because security agencies operated with outdated structures and weak information systems. The NDLEA under Marwa appears to have embraced a different philosophy: anticipate criminal activity before it manifests fully.
This intelligence-driven model deserves careful study by other Nigerian security institutions. Terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, cybercrime, arms trafficking, and financial crimes increasingly operate through decentralized and adaptive networks similar to narcotics syndicates. Combating such threats requires integrated intelligence systems, inter-agency trust, technological modernization, and international cooperation.
The success of the NDLEA demonstrates that security effectiveness is not solely determined by force deployment but by information superiority. The agency’s operational record illustrates how data analysis, surveillance coordination, behavioural profiling, strategic partnerships, and institutional professionalism can significantly weaken organized crime structures.
Importantly, the agency’s achievements also challenge dangerous stereotypes about criminality. Society often assumes criminals possess predictable appearances. Drug trafficking has proven otherwise. Criminality cuts across age, gender, physical condition, religion, education, and social status. The elderly can traffic drugs. Women can operate as cartel couriers. Persons with disabilities can be recruited into organized crime operations. Professionals can secretly coordinate narcotics networks. This reality compels law enforcement agencies to avoid superficial assumptions and instead embrace evidence-based policing.
The multidimensional character of narcotics trafficking therefore mirrors the multidimensional response required to combat it. Modern anti-drug operations demand psychological intelligence, forensic sophistication, international collaboration, legal competence, operational discipline, and institutional resilience. Under General Marwa, the NDLEA increasingly presents itself as an example of what strategic reform can achieve within Nigerian law enforcement.
The broader national implication is significant. A secure Nigeria cannot emerge where organized criminal enterprises operate freely across borders, airports, seaports, highways, and financial systems. Drug trafficking destabilizes communities, corrupts institutions, finances violence, and destroys human potential. Every successful interdiction therefore represents more than a routine arrest; it represents the protection of national stability and public safety.
Ultimately, the war against illicit drugs is not simply a contest between traffickers and security agents. It is a battle between criminal deception and institutional intelligence. The trafficker constantly searches for new disguises. The law enforcement operative must constantly refine new detection strategies. The criminal network depends on secrecy, manipulation, and corruption. The enforcement institution depends on professionalism, intelligence gathering, discipline, and collaboration.
The evidence increasingly suggests that the NDLEA, under Marwa’s leadership, has recognized this reality and adapted accordingly. Through operational sophistication, inter-agency coordination, international partnerships, and intelligence-led policing, the agency has positioned itself as one of Nigeria’s most proactive security institutions. Its evolving model offers valuable lessons for broader national security management.
As organized crime becomes increasingly complex and transnational, Nigeria’s security future will depend largely on institutions capable of thinking beyond traditional enforcement methods. The NDLEA experience demonstrates that modern security challenges require modern intelligence frameworks. In that regard, the agency’s operational trajectory may well serve as a template for combating sophisticated crimes in the twenty-first century.
We are appreciative of these phenomenal efforts of the management and operatives of the NDLEA to be far ahead of drug traffickers and all we can wish them is more and more successes.
*EMMANUEL NNADOZIE ONWUBIKO is the founder of the HUMAN RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA and was NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF THE NATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION OF NIGERIA.
Politics
2027: Gov. Fubara Breaks Silence, Reaffirms Membership of APC *Says I’ve not gone anywhere; I’m still a member of APC * Declares General Hospital, Psychiatric Hospital Projects, 100 per cent complete
By George Mgbeleke
Governor of Rivers State, Sir Siminalayi Fubara on Wednesday, broke his silence over widespread speculations that he had defected from the All Progressives Congress (APC) and joined the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) in the ongoing realignment of political forces ahead of the 2027 General Elections..
In a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Onwuka Nzeshi,Governor Fubara made the clarification during an inspection tour of the newly constructed General Hospital and the fully remodelled Neuropsychiatric Hospital, both in Rumuigbo, Obiakpor Local Government Area of Rivers State.
Fubara said that contrary to the erroneous reports in a section of the media in the last couple of days, suggesting that he had joined another political party, he remained a member of the ruling party and will continue to work for the overall interest of the party.
“I know that there have been a lot of drama in the media; one story or another. I am a member of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and nothing has changed. People should stop using whatever situation that they pick up from the social media or their own interpretation of any situation to present me wrongly.
“I’ve not gone anywhere; I’m still a member of the APC and I remain a member. Whatever happens, what is important is supporting the overall interest of the party,” he said.
Governor Fubara was conducted round the facilities by the Director of Medical Services in the Rivers State Ministry of Health, Dr. Vincent Wachukwu, who led him through the hospital wards, a conference hall, ICT centre, students hostel, staff quarters, and other critical sections.
He expressed delight at the completion of the two projects which according to him, were conceived to address critical needs in the health sector in the state. He recalled that the while the rehabilitation of the Psychiatric Hospital became necessary at some point, the administration also discovered that the area had no General Hospital to take care of the basic health needs of the people.
“This very project, if you could remember, when we came in we had an issue that required our sudden visit and it had to do with mental health. So when we came here for the inspection of the Rehabilitation Centre that the board was trying to put together, we found out that we had more issues than even the mental health issue.
“We didn’t have a General Hospital to serve the people within this area. The closest medical center that they had here was the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital ( UPTH) which is very far from here. We felt that with the space we have in this compound, it will be proper for us to also have a General Hospital situated in this particular facility to take care of the neighboring communities up to Rumuola, Rumuolumeni and all the surrounding areas.
“Today, to the glory of God, we can see that the project is already completed. It is not 95 percent complete, it is a hundred percent completed.
“We’re happy because, it is a promise made and a promise fulfilled. Like I’ll always say, what is important is doing what will touch the life of our people. Our people should be first and that is how important this project is for us in this administration,” he said.
Politics
Any Inauguration of INC Executive without N-CITRE is Exercise in Futility ,says King Bubaraye Dakolo
By David Owei,Bayelsa
The chairman of Bayelsa state Traditional Rulers Council, who also doubles as the chairman of the National Conference of Ijaw Traditional Rulers and Elders ( N-CITRE ) His Royal Majesty King Bubaraye Dakolo ,the Ibenanowei of Ekpetiama kingdom,Agada iv, says he still that the N-CITRE still remains the highest organ that superintendents over the Ijaw National Congress and other persons or group that flout it’s order in inaugurating any body and as National President of INC,is an exercise in futility as the purported April 13th 2026 election lacked legitimacy and had constitutional lacuna,urging the general public to discountence it.
He stated this while briefing the the media on the current crisis that is plaguing the ljaw National Congress,INC,stating that the N-CITRE and other stakeholders across the ljaw Nation warned against the unconstitutional and illegal attempt to swear in an unconstitutional and illegitimate leadership of INC arising from the highly disputed April 13th,2026 electoral process.
He urged all to maintain the status quo.
He he still insist on
“The April 10, 2026 N-CITRE resolution in line with Article 14, D, 2 (e), (f), (g) of the INC 2019
Constitution, suspending all electoral activities, was clear and officially known, yet the president and the
electoral committee proceeded in defiance of that directive. The president and N-ELECO also ignored
interventions by the Governor of Bayelsa State, Senator Douye Diri and other well-meaning Ijaw elders,
civil society organizations, and interest groups, advising that the elections be suspended pending the
resolution of outstanding disputes and constitutional concerns.
He therefore noted with utter dismay the attempts to legitimize an inauguration ceremony by invoking the
names of respected public officials like the Governor of Bayelsa state without authorization.
This act is
suggestive of a desperate attempt by Prof Okaba and his co-conspirators to extend his tenure through the
back door, all to cover his many misdeeds.
The N-CITRE also notes with concern that most of the perpetrators of
this ignoble attempt to factionalize the INC emanated from the western zone, which is the zone of Prof.
Okaba. The consequences of such actions should be clear to all.
We believe that legitimacy cannot be manufactured through disputed procedures, factional sponsorship,
or ceremonial swearings-in conducted in violation of constitutional order and judicial authority. Any
leadership emerging from the disputed process would lack the moral, constitutional, and representative
legitimacy required to speak on behalf of the Ijaw people” he said .
He further explained that in history of INC,the leadership was always sworn in Bayelsa state by N-CITRE which he heads and by midnight today the tenure of prof Benjamin Okaba has elapsed and the constitution states that the chairman of N-CITRE takes responsibilities of running the organization until an eleco was put in place to conduct an election to swear in a National executive that will run the fore most Ijaw socio – political organization that will
restore INC to constitutional order and prevent it from being
annihilated.
The consequences of this current situation could lead to the formation of an alternative body
to serve the interest of the Ijaw people.
“Also there are court orders baring anybody from swearing anybody”
” Nobody in CITRE ,or from ELECO should swear in anybody .And that sail through ,it will portend a lot of problems for the Ijaw nation. INC is not a lawless entity”
Politics
2027: Don’t vote for APC, PDP Stalwart Udoh insists - says Tinubu leads promise and fail govt
By Emmanuel Ikpe
Based the fact that President Bola Tinubu and Governor Umo Eno have allegedly failed to fulfill all their important campaign promises, especially to give Nigerians steady power supply and Akwa Ibom people Ibom Deep Seaport, it is fundamentally correct that the APC should not be voted back to power comes 2027.
Engr Augustine Udoh, a PDP stalwart and ICT Entrepreneur gave the charge while speaking with a group of reporters in Uyo on issues of public importance, good governance, human development and egalitarian society and related political developments in Akwa Ibom State and Nigeria as a whole over the weekend.
Described the Supreme Court verdict as unbecoming with a view that it ought not to have gone to court in the first place if not for the class of greedy people among them who bent on tearing the part for selfish political interest.
Arguing that it is uncalled for that one could assumed to be a member of PDP but is working for the other party and her presidential candidate, a situation he blamed on former governor of Rivers State, Barr Nyesom Wike and his co-travellers and supporters.
He observed that those who are having the interest of the PDP at heart are the ones perpetrating disunity, disharmony and disaffection among party members.
”We stand on the mandate of the supreme court and the Turaki led PDP, though it seems INEC is working with Federal government against interest of supposed opposition parties in order to favor APC and Tinubu government, we believe the will of the people will prevail, says Udoh.
”The people are aware of the situation in the country and they need a new directions, that is why we tow the path of alignment between PDP and other opposition parties like the ADC, to filed a candidate or otherwise to salvage Nigeria ”
Adding that the future of PDP in Nigeria is still bright and there’s hope that PDP will bounce back with good package for Nigeria.
”The people are no longer interested in APC government, due her inability to fulfill her campaign promises, that instead of change and progress and development, Nigerians are going through hardship, suffering, killings, hunger, sicknesses and there’s no hope that this country can be better if APC continue in power”.
”look Nigeria, there’s no constant power supply, the presidency is using solar, this people have failed foofly, they don’t have anything to offer, look at small countries like Bene Republic, Ghana, and Nigeria has steady electricity, but Nigeria is retrogressive, this is caused by bad governance.
”Tinubu said that if he cannot give Nigerians steady power supply, he should not be voted back, and we stand by that his declaration, that he should not be voted back and no APC state should be voted in in 2027 APC do not have good idealogies for Nigeria and it is high time Nigerians realize that they are deceptive and lack ideas except borrowing”, he added.
He expressed the enthusiasm that PDP which used to be a religion in Akwa Ibom will resurface after the incumbent governor Umo Eno is voted out by 2027
” Akwa Ibom people are very disappointed by the action of Gov Umo Eno to deceived the citizens and politicians that he will give the state a deep seaport, a reason he gave for defecting to APC to align with central, and this disrupted the the way PDP used to be a religion. You look now, what signature project has the government of Umo Eno has achieved so far, and I wonder what they will used to campaign in 2027.”
He dismissed the assumption that APC has done anything good in the country except the bad policies, programs, hardship, suffering, insecurities and lack humanity sympathy, high cost of living which PDP will come to undo and change the situation around for better.
As we walked towards the election year, He urged Nigerians and Akwa Ibom people to work with one mind, by coming up with policies and ideologies that will turn things around because the current policies and ideologies of the APC government does not work by voting for people with good vision and human interest at heart like the PDP.
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