metro
Hajj pilgrims excrete 90 wraps of cocaine at Kano airport
Hajj pilgrims excrete 90 wraps of cocaine at Kano airport
- NDLEA seizes N9.3bn drugs in six days
Chairman and Chief Executive of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd) has confirmed the seizure of drugs and illicit items worth over N9.3bn during a six-day anti-narcotics operation across different states from Monday May 26 to Saturday 31st May 2025.
The agency said it dismantled a major cocaine smuggling network that exploited hajj pilgrimage routes, intercepted counterfeit cash, and confiscated large quantities of opioids, cannabis, and codeine-based syrup.
The crackdown began with the arrest of two hajj-bound pilgrims, Ibrahim Umar Mustapha and Muhammad Siraj Shifado, at the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport, Kano, on Monday, 26th May.
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Both men were intercepted while attempting to board Ethiopian Airlines flight ET 940 to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
A statement by the NDLEA Director, Media and Advocacy, Femi Babafemi, said body scans revealed they had ingested illicit substances.
He said, “Under excretion observation, each suspect expelled 45 wraps of cocaine, totalling 90 pellets weighing 1.04kg.”
Further investigation led to the arrest of three suspected cartel leaders, Abubakar Muhammad, Abdulhakeem Muhammed Tijjani, and Muhammad Aji Shugaba, on Tuesday and Wednesday in Kano.
The agency said the syndicate specialised in “trafficking cocaine to Saudi Arabia by sponsoring drug mules disguised as pilgrims.”
Also, NDLEA personnel on Tuesday, 27th May in Adamawa State, recovered 390 compressed blocks of skunk, a potent form of cannabis, from a parked Toyota Sienna vehicle along the Ngurore–Yola road.
In another Kano airport operation on Wednesday, 28th May, NDLEA officers apprehended 60-year-old businessman Chinedu Leonard Okigbo, en route to Iran on Qatar Airways flight QR1432.
He excreted 65 wraps of cocaine weighing 1.41kg after a body scan indicated ingestion.
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At the Port Harcourt Ports Complex, Onne, Rivers State, NDLEA operatives working with the Nigeria Customs Service and other security personnel examined seven flagged containers between 28th and 30th May.
They recovered: “825,200 bottles of codeine-based syrup and trodol valued at N5.8bn.
“5.1 million pills of opioids, mostly tapentadol 225mg, worth N3.6bn”.
According to Babafemi, these seizures bring the total street value of the drugs confiscated at the port to N9.3bn.
On Friday, May 30, along the Kano–Maiduguri road, officers intercepted Abubakar Hussein (42) and Sahabi Adamu (53) with $900,000 in suspected counterfeit cash.
The suspects and the money are under investigation by the relevant authorities.
In Kwara State, on Saturday 31st May, NDLEA arrested a known female drug dealer, Alhaja Mutiat Abdul-Fatai, in the Oja Oba area of Ilorin. Seized from her premises were assorted quantities of tramadol, flunitrazepam, and codeine-based syrup.
Commending his officers, Marwa reaffirmed NDLEA’s commitment to balancing drug supply reduction with preventive education.
Hajj pilgrims excrete 90 wraps of cocaine at Kano airport
metro
Sokoto Officials Deny Mosque Attack as Bandits Kill Five in Gatawa Raid
Sokoto Officials Deny Mosque Attack as Bandits Kill Five in Gatawa Raid
Chairman of Sabon Birni Local Government Area in Sokoto State, Ayuba Hashimu, has dismissed viral reports alleging that bandits attacked a mosque in the council area, killing an Imam and several worshippers.
Some online platforms had circulated claims that armed bandits stormed a mosque in Sabon Birni, murdered the Imam and congregants, and abducted others.
However, Hashimu, speaking by telephone, described the reports as entirely false.
“I don’t know any mosque that was attacked, not to talk of killing of an Imam and worshippers. The story is false,” he stated.
A member of the state legislature representing the area, Hon. Aminu Boza, also debunked the claims, insisting that no mosque attack occurred on Saturday.
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“I don’t know how they got their story, but it is not true. No mosque was attacked by bandits,” he said.
While officials denied the alleged mosque incident, a separate early morning assault on Gatawa town within the same LGA resulted in five deaths and left one person critically injured.
A resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Daily Trust that six people — including two married women, two teenage girls and two young boys — were abducted by attackers suspected to be bandits.
“The bandits invaded our community around 1:30 a.m. and started shooting sporadically. Our vigilantes engaged them, but four of them paid the supreme price on the spot. Two others sustained gunshot injuries and were taken to the hospital, but one later died,” the resident said.
He added that the attackers also stole livestock as they fled.
“We heard them exchanging fire with security agents, but none of the abducted persons was rescued,” he recounted.
Sokoto Officials Deny Mosque Attack as Bandits Kill Five in Gatawa Raid
metro
FG Begins Recovery of 157 Almajiri Schools
FG Begins Recovery of 157 Almajiri Schools
The Federal Government has commenced the official recovery of 157 model Almajiri schools built during the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan, in a renewed push to overhaul Almajiri education across the country.
The move was confirmed by Nura Muhammad, spokesperson for the National Commission for Almajiri and Out-of-School Children Education (NCAOOSCE), during an interview in Abuja on Sunday. He described the recovery process as a crucial step toward fully revamping and institutionalising Almajiri education.
Muhammad explained that the effort follows the establishment of a legally backed national body now responsible for all Almajiri-related programmes — a structure he said was missing during earlier reform attempts.
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While commending former President Jonathan for constructing the schools, which he described as “a noble and well-intentioned stride toward modernising the system,” Muhammad noted that the previous initiative struggled due to weak policy implementation, including inadequate engagement with Alarammas, the traditional Qur’anic teachers who play a central role in the Almajiri system.
He added that the lack of a strong institutional framework — with the project operating only as an initiative under the Federal Ministry of Education — contributed to its challenges.
According to him, the Commission is now strengthened by law and guided by the newly adopted National Policy on Almajiri Education, positioning it to deliver sustainable reforms.
Muhammad expressed confidence that harmful practices linked to the Almajiri system would be addressed, emphasising that all recovered schools would soon be fully under the Commission’s control and rehabilitated to serve their original purpose.
FG Begins Recovery of 157 Almajiri Schools
metro
Delta State Police Arrest Suspects in Killing of Retired Justice Ifeoma Okogwu
Delta State Police Arrest Suspects in Killing of Retired Justice Ifeoma Okogwu
The Delta State Police Command has made a significant breakthrough in the investigation into the murder of retired Justice Ifeoma Okogwu in Anambra State, arresting key suspects linked to the case.
Spokesperson SP Bright Edafe disclosed on Sunday that operatives of the Homicide Section of the State Criminal Investigation Department (CID), acting on credible intelligence, apprehended 25-year-old security guard Godwin Mngumi on 6 December 2025. Mngumi allegedly murdered the retired judge, and authorities also recovered the deceased’s mobile phone from him.
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According to Edafe, Mngumi confessed to inviting a friend, Nnaji Obalum, and another accomplice — who remains at large — to the residence where the crime was committed. Obalum has since been arrested, while a manhunt continues for the third suspect.
The arrests mark a major step forward in the effort to bring all perpetrators of the high-profile murder to justice.
Delta State Police Arrest Suspects in Killing of Retired Justice Ifeoma Okogwu
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