18th June, 2010
At least 70 per cent of suspected drug traffickers arrested between January and May this year at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Ikeja, Lagos, Southwest, Nigeria, have been set free, a source familiar with the release has disclosed.
The source, a National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) investigator, told P.M.NEWS that of the 85 drug smugglers apprehended at the MMIA so far this year, at least, 60 of them have been released by the courts.
“It is so annoying. We risk our lives and they release them. They can come back here and harm us. So, what are we doing at the airport? Why are we arresting drug suspects if they will be granted bail in court the next day?â€
“Suspects here are more afraid of journalists than the court. They are begging us to take them to court, since, according to the law, they can be granted bail. At least, 70 percent of them have either been acquitted or granted bail this year.
“How can someone swallow cocaine and the evidence are there that the suspect swallowed the drug; how can such a person now go to court and claim that he is innocent and the court grants him bail?
“Something is wrong with our judicial system,†he lamented.
The source, who asked not to be mentioned because he is not authorised to interact with the media in an official capacity, told our correspondent that NDLEA officers at MMIA, Nigeriaâ€
He cited the example of Mr. Uzoaru Oliver, a drug convict, who was first arrested by NDLEA officers on 9 April, 2009 for attempting to smuggle 1.273 kilogrammes of cocaine to Germany. Oliver was released in December 2009 and was re-arrested on 3 June this year with cocaine concealed in his stomach.
“Now, tell me,†he lamented, “why wonâ€
The NDLEA source narrated that in April this year, he was at a popular place in Ikeja and met a suspect he arrested in February.
“She tapped me on the shoulder and said, ‘Oga NDLEA, you donâ€
He disclosed that at the moment, 21 suspects are being detained at the airport and most of them are asking the agency to take them to court where they will be granted bail.
“Judges are telling us that the fact that they are free on bail does not mean that is the end of the case. But those dangerous people should not have been released in the first place,†our source said.
He called on the federal lawmakers to amend the constitution and prevent drug traffickers from getting bail.
—Simon Ateba