No fewer than 286 assets and 600 bank accounts of drug barons have been seized by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) between January 2021 and August 2022.
NDLEA spokesman Femi Babafemi, who disclosed this in a document on Tuesday, said the assets consisted of 249 exotic cars and 37 mansions, PUNCH reports.
This is coming after the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime categorised Nigeria as the transit point for “heroin and cocaine intended for European, East Asian, and North American markets.”
The UN agency stated that since 2004 “drug traffickers have been increasingly using West African countries, including Nigeria, to smuggle large amounts of cocaine from South America into Europe and North America.
Nigeria has a relatively high rate of drug abuse due to the continued availability of illicitly manufactured and diverted pharmaceutical products containing narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances.”
According to the document, NDLEA said it was faced with the “overwhelming task of drug control in a country with an exceptionally high prevalence of drug use of 14.4 per cent.”
Babafemi said the agency has confiscated 286 assets and frozen 600 bank accounts in the last 20 months.
NDLEA disclosed that the drug barons’ assets consisted of “249 exotic vehicles seized and 37 properties forfeited, all scattered across the country.”
The agency further stated that it seized N871.53m worth of illegal drug funds between January 2021 and August 2022.
Babafemi also stated that N619.12m was recorded as final illegal drug funds forfeiture and N252.41m as interim forfeiture. The agency grouped this under its drug supply reduction effort, where it revealed that it arrested 18,940 suspected drug traffickers from January 2021 to July 2022.
Under its drug supply reduction efforts, it stated, “Assets and financial investigation: Illicit drug funds that were investigated and seized include Final Forfeiture―(i.) One million, three hundred and nineteen thousand, four hundred dollars ($1,319,400) (ii.) One hundred and two thousand pounds (£102,000) (iii.) Fourteen million CFA Francs (CFA 14, 000, 000) ― and Interim forfeiture―Two hundred and fifty-two million, forty hundred and seven thousand, seven hundred and twenty-six-naira, twenty Kobo, (N252,407,726.20).”
The currencies were converted at the Central Bank of Nigeria’s official rate on September 2, 2022. At the time, one dollar was N424.55; one pound was N490.78, and one CFA was N0.64.