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Central Africa New Drug Transit Hub, Nigerian Arraigned In Cameroon

The arrest of a Nigerian allegedly smuggling heroin here highlights what officials say is a growing problem of drug trafficking in Central Africa.
Egboka Ikechukwu, 28, appeared in court in Douala, Cameroon's economic hub, Thursday to respond to charges of cross-border drug trafficking.

Ikechukwu was arrested Tuesday night by police at Douala International Airport shortly after arriving on a Kenya Airways flight. He has been formally charged with the possession of 7 kilograms (15 pounds) of heroin.


"The passenger's behavior betrayed suspicion which prompted an exhaustive search of his person and luggage by customs agents," said Customs Subdivision Commander, Gregoire Biloa. "They found three empty carryalls whose stiches had been tampered with to hide the powder which has been tested and confirmed to be heroin."

Ikechukwu faces up to 10 years imprisonment and fines that could amount to 10 million CFA francs ($20,000), said Biloa.

Speaking to The Associated Press from his jail cell, Ikechukwu denied the charges. He insisted he is a prosperous businessman in Nigeria and he flew to Bujumbura, Burundi via Nairobi, Kenya on October 18 to visit a friend.

"I don't know who put the drug in my bag. I don't know whether it's in my hotel room in Bujumbura that they did this thing to me. In my life, I've never pushed drugs before. I don't know anything about drugs," said Ikechukwu.

"I'm a businessman. I have my own shop in Nigeria and I'm doing well. I went to Bujumbura to visit my friend and from there; I came back to Cameroon to see one of my friends, that's all. And now I find myself in all this mess. It's a setup," he argued.

Despite his denials, Ikechukwu is one of a growing number of suspected drug traffickers here, according to the state prosecutor and customs and police departments. The arrest is the latest in a steadily swelling series in recent months which show that Cameroon and Central Africa are fast becoming a transit zone and marketplace for South America's drug cartels, according to Biloa.

There has been a dramatic increase in seizures of cocaine and heroin amounting to hundreds of kilograms, according to data from border police and customs departments at air and sea ports in the sub-region. That is a significant increase from a few grams a couple of years ago.

The neighboring region of West Africa has already become established as a transit point to Europe for South American traffickers, according to a report issued in July by regional Interpol officials. According to them the bulging seizures confirm that Central Africa is not only fast becoming a South American drug passageway, but also a consumption base.

"A few decades ago, it was zero," Lawrence Tang Enow, Senior Police Superintendent and Interpol Regional Training Officer in Cameroon told AP. "After some time, we started seizing a few grams. Now we got to a situation where last year we seized 140 kilograms (308 pounds) at the Douala International Airport alone."

Separate Interpol country reports based on police and customs statistics show increased seizures of Europe-bound cocaine and heroin and rising numbers of arrests of peddlers. The South American cartels and their local accomplices turning Central Africa into a stepping stone along their "cocaine route" to Europe by exploiting local weaknesses such as deficient controls at ports, poor traveler inspection equipment, porous land and sea borders and endemic corruption overwhelming security and customs departments, according to Interpol.

In February, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, UNODC, estimated that cocaine smuggling in West and Central Africa currently generates some $900 million annually, up from $800 million in 2009.

Particularly worrying is the suspected involvement of Al Qaidi in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and Nigeria's Islamist terrorist group, Boko Haram, who may be involved in trafficking to fund their activities, according to a report published last year by the US Drug Enforcement Administration.

"When the drug dealers come in, they influence the politics of countries, criminal activities and corruption. It is a very serious problem," said Conrad Atefor Ntsefor, official at the Interpol Central Africa Regional Bureau in the Cameroonian capital, Yaoundé.
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