The recent revelation that three Nigerians, recently detained by Saudi authorities on allegations of drug trafficking, had been framed by an international drug trafficking syndicate operating at Malam Aminu Kano International Airport (MAKIA) further confirms the persistence of such nefarious activities, bringing to mind a similar scandal in 2019 that nearly cost an innocent woman her life in the Kingdom.
The syndicate’s modus operandi begins by targeting unsuspecting travellers
at MAKIA who appear to have little or no experience in international air travel
protocols.
Exploiting the fact that such travellers rarely turn up at the
airport check-in counter with enough luggage to take up their full luggage allowance,
if they are even aware of it, the syndicate members covertly tag and check in
drug-containing luggage under the traveller’s names.
On arrival in Jeddah or Madinah, the syndicate’s Saudi-based
Nigerian accomplices monitor the luggage processing. If the bags make it
through undetected, they somehow manage to claim them, sometimes with, and
other times without, the traveller’s knowledge or involvement.
However, if the bags are flagged, the accomplices vanish, leaving
the unsuspecting travellers to be apprehended and subjected to the Kingdom’s
strict judicial system, where drug trafficking can carry the ultimate
punishment: public beheading.
Despite Nigerian authorities’ assurances since the 2019 scandal
that all structural and operational loopholes exploited by the syndicate had
been addressed, the latest incident demonstrates that these measures were
insufficient. It also underscores the growing notoriety of the otherwise
reputable MAKIA as a hub for international drug trafficking syndicates
specialising in framing unsuspecting travellers.
If organised crime of this sophistication can occur at the
relatively less corruption-prone MAKIA, one can only imagine what might be
happening at Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos or Nnamdi Azikiwe
International Airport in Abuja.
Only Allah knows how many innocent people, framed in this way and
too unlucky for their ordeals to be publicised or their innocence to be proven,
ended up publicly beheaded in Saudi Arabia.
Although the Nigerian government has assured that it will leave no
stone unturned to secure the exoneration of these innocent Nigerians currently
facing drug trafficking charges in Saudi Arabia, it should not take the
situation for granted.
Meanwhile, it should also take decisive action to address this menace at MAKIA and other airports across the country. After all, the few individuals apprehended may represent only a fraction of the culprits, with many others likely still out there.
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