Following the recent interception of
cocaine trafficked by an Arik Airline worker, the National Drug Law
Enforcement Agency has decided to extend its searchlight on cleaners,
air traffic controllers and other workers believed to have enjoyed
special treatment at the nation’s international airport.
The NDLEA said with the latest discovery
that hard drugs could be smuggled by airline and airport workers
through items like food, it had become necessary for every worker to be
screened like passengers and visitors to the airports.
Officials of the United Kingdom Border
Force had arrested an Arik Air crew member, Chika Egwu Udensi, at the
London Heathrow Airport, shortly after an Arik Air flight W3101, which
departed from the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, touched
down in the UK.
The NDLEA put the street value of the 20kg drug found with the suspect at £350,000 (N105m).
The agency also said it had obtained
closed-circuit television footage of how another Arik Air worker,
Ikechukwu Chibuzor Oliver, who works as a catering loader, smuggled
three bags of cocaine among food supplies for flight W3101.
The Head, Public Affairs, NDLEA, Mr.
Mitchell Ofoyeju, who spoke to our correspondent on Friday, explained
that the agency was usually the last line of fence in airport security
system.
He stated that the agency had resolved
to put all workers across all departments in the airports under its
watch to ensure that “there is no repeat of this ugly incident.”
Ofoyeju added, “We have extended our
focus to more areas: The catering department, which we have just
uncovered now; the maintenance department – those that are in charge of
maintenance; the cleaners – there are cleaners that clean sensitive
areas of the airport like the tarmac and the ramps.
“Another area we are looking at is those
that are in charge of ticketing; they are also part of the airport
community. Also, those that handle the luggage; once the luggage is
checked in, they go through the conveyor belt to the basement, where the
loaders will transport them to the aircraft. All these areas will be
given 100 per cent attention. Even the air traffic control personnel
will be on our list.
“We are also looking at increasing our
surveillance of those that own restaurants within the premises. It will
also include the car park and the drivers. All these make the big
picture for the airport community.”
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