Latest News

Indian sailors fined $6 Million in Lagos Cocaine Case

The National Drug Law Enforcement 'Agency (NDLEA), a Nigerian agency, announced on Thursday that a Nigerian court had convicted 11 Indian sailors, and their vessel, of trafficking cocaine into?country. They were fined a total of $6 million.

The Federal High Court of Lagos found the crew of the merchant vessel MV Aruna Hulya to be guilty of concealing 31.5 kilograms cocaine aboard the vessel in Apapa port.

The case is part of an broader crackdown on drug trafficking by Nigerian authorities through commercial entry points like Lagos.

Nigeria has worked to increase?enforcement of drug trafficking networks that use Nigeria as a transit country for illicit substances bound for Europe and other market.

The agency reported that the crew, including captain Sharma Shashi Bhushan, and 10 other Indian citizens, were arrested on January 2, after NDLEA operatives discovered the?drugs concealed in one of 'the ship’s storage compartments. The court found all 12 defendants guilty, including the ship itself, under Nigeria's antidrug laws. The local law also applies to the ship that transported the drugs. The drug enforcement agency's spokesman said that the defendants had accepted the terms of conviction, and the document was then presented to the judge in order for it to be sealed. The?ship had to pay restitution of $5.3 million to the Nigerian Government, and each crew member had to pay a fine?100,000. Owners of the ship are responsible for the fine, and if the owner is unable to pay it, then the vessel will be auctioned.

The remaining crew members were each ordered to pay $50,000, which brings the total financial penalties to around $6 million. The total financial?penalties were about $6 million.

NDLEA chairman Mohamed Buba Marwa stated that the judgment sends a powerful signal to international drug-trafficking networks.

(source: Reuters)