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Africa: Nigerian Narcs in Losing Battle with Marijuana Farmers

Drug War Chronicles

Friday 23 Jun 2006

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Nigeria's booming marijuana trade is more than the National Drug Law
Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) can handle, the agency's commander in Edo
state, a center of the trade, told a major newspaper last week. An
undermanned, under-equipped, and under-budgeted anti-drug agency can't
compete with rising domestic and international demand and few other
economic options for northern farmers, he said.

But the narc is making the best of it by claiming that Nigerian bud is
now "the best in the world." That claim is open to heated debate, but
"Indian hemp," as the locals call it, is now showing up in European
markets, where it competes with the best the rest of the world has to offer.

In its 2006 International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, the US
State Department noted that "marijuana/cannabis is grown all over
Nigeria, but mainly in central and northern states. Cultivation is
generally on small fields in remote areas. Its market is concentrated in
West Africa and Europe; none is known to have found its way to the
United States. However, domestic use is becoming more widespread. The
NDLEA has destroyed marijuana fields, but has no regular, organized
eradication program in place. There are no reliable figures to determine
crop size and yields."

"The drug war in this part of the country is higher than any other place
because, essentially, Edo state is a home for the cultivation of
cannabis," state NDLEA commander Okey Ihebom told the Abuja Daily Trust.
"They plant Indian hemp in large quantity in this state. The cannabis
being produced in Edo and Ondo states is the best in the world. So,
there is a ready market for it anywhere in the world. We also understand
that the cannabis from those two states is more expensive. The producers
and the peddlers are therefore willing to take any type of risk to
produce and export the drugs."

The state only has one vehicle for marijuana law enforcement and no good
jail, Ihebom complained, and farmers have been known to fight back. "You
cannot get a vehicle that can carry you to such farms. The farms are not
accessible by any form of vehicle. You will drive into the forest and
stop about 20 kilometers away from the farm and trek to the place," he
explained. "At the farms, the farmers are mostly armed. They know the
area better than us. After an exchange of fire, when we overpower them,
we make arrest and commence the destruction of the farms. It will take
us days to destroy a large farm. At times, they will regroup and fight
us back with sophisticated weapons. That was how the command lost two of
its men recently."

It also lacks an effective prevention campaign. "People smoke cannabis
out of ignorance," Ihebom said. "When we enlighten the public on the
adverse effecting of smoking the drug, I am sure a good number of people
will stop the habit and those that are not in the habit of smoking will
report to us those they see smoking."

Smoking pot was a bad idea, Iheobom told the Daily Trust. "The ordinary
smoker is also very dangerous to the society," he claimed. "The moment
one smokes and starts thinking he is what he is not, you know there is
trouble ahead. So we are out for both the smokers, those trading it, the
dealers, the exporters, the producers and the distributors as well," he
said.

While Ihebom emphasized violence linked to the marijuana trade, he
conceded that wasn't always the case, but he worried that the inflow of
money to the impoverished region would be harmful. "The perception that
cannabis producing or consuming communities are violent, may not be
entirely true. Look at Ondo, a leading cannabis producing state in the
country and yet it is a peaceful state," he said. "But when you consider
the inflow of cash from both within and abroad into cannabis producing
communities, you realize that the cash flow encourages crime. That is
exactly the case in Edo state. You know because of drug peddling and
this international prostitution, there is also a lot of money here and
so crime rate is also way high."

Ihebom implicity recognized he was fighting a losing battle, but the
tide could surely be turned with some more resources, darn it! "You see,
drug war is not a war that should be left for the NDLEA alone to fight,"
he said. "America, with all its sophistication, cannot be able to stop
drug peddling. If you look at the volume of drug that enters America
daily, you will be surprised. It is true that with better funding and
equipping, we will do more in our struggle with these people."
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/441/nigeria.shtml

 

 

 

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