Showing posts with label Niger republic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Niger republic. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Nigerian arrested with N1bn cash in Niger Republic

The police in neighbouring Niger Republic have arrested a Nigerian carrying 4.6m Euros (N1.05bn) in cash. The man was arrested at the Diori Hamani Airport in Niamey, the capital of Niger, en route Dubai in the United Arab Emirate.


General Buhari

General Buhari


The Nigerien police said they suspected that the man was fleeing with the money in order to avoid being caught by the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari, who has been prosecuting an anti-corruption campaign since assumption of office on May 29.


They also expressed worry that there had been an upsurge in the number of Nigerians trafficking huge sums of money in cash through the neighbouring country.


The police in Niger are already working on the suspicion that the money traffickers have accomplices in the country.


The arrest of the Nigerian has been a big news item in the Nigerien newspapers and television stations.


Curiously the authorities here on Wednesday claimed ignorance of the money seizure in the neighbouring country though the Customs officers in Niger were already kicking against repatriating the cash to Nigeria.


A media report in Niger on Saturday said the National Union of Customs Officers at a press briefing “denounced the request of the Nigerian authorities” to return the seized money.


The Customs official said there had been several similar seizures in Niamey from people trafficking money from Nigeria, putting the amount that had been so seized in several billions of naira.


They said the seized money had been mainly in dollars, euros and pounds sterling, asking the Niger authorities to allow the Customs officials to do their job without interference.


When contacted, the Senior Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said he could not speak on the development because his brief was to speak for the President.


He therefore referred one of our correspondents to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.


“I speak for the President. On this kind of issues, I will advice that you speak with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,” he said.


At the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the officials denied knowledge of the seizure in Niger Republic. The ministry’s spokesperson, Ogbole Ahmedu-Ode, said the ministry had not received official communication on the arrest of any Nigerian.


“I am hearing about this incident for the first time from you, we have not received any communication on the matter from any quarters,” he said over the telephone.


Calls to the Public Relations Officer of the Nigeria Immigration Service, Emeka Obua, did not elicit any response.


He also did not respond to text messages to his mobile telephone on the issue.


The Nigerien embassy in Abuja could not be reached for comment on Wednesday as calls to the mission’s phone lines failed to connect.


The spokesman for the Nigerian Customs Service, Mr Wale Adeniyi could not be reached for comments as text message and repeated calls made to his mobile line were not replied as of the time (8.30pm) of filling this report.


But a senior official of the Service told one of our correspondents in confidence that the issue had yet to be brought to the attention of the agency.


The official said since the matter was a diplomatic issue, there were protocols that must be adhered to before the customs could step in.


The official said, “As we speak now, the matter hasn’t been drawn to our attention. This is a diplomatic matter that has to be treated with caution in order to avoid diplomatic row between both countries.


“The identity of the person in question has not been established and it is the Nigerian embassy in Niger that would verify that.


“After that is done, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs will be notified before other security agencies would be invited on the matter.


“So, it is not something that the Customs will jump into and start investigating because the Customs in Niger don’t report directly to us in Nigeria.”



Nigerian arrested with N1bn cash in Niger Republic

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Boko Haram pays N500,000 to Niger recruits — Gang members

Boko Haram recruits members, not just from Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad, it also gets recruits from Niger Republic who it pays N500, 000. However, their pay is raised should their bombs kill more people in Nigeria, the BBC has said.


The teens, when they are enlisted, are given Tramol [an opiate drug], marijuana and alcohol. They break into houses for cash; sometimes beat people for money, and steal their animals for food. They gather again for their opium and drinks.


Though the recruits, barely in their teens, do not like the sect and its activities, they said they took to violence as being students they have no jobs and are poor.


Boko-recruits


The BBC documentary on Boko Haram, entitled ‘Niger hit by Nigeria’s Boko Haram fallout’


yesterday focused on young boys of a Niger Republic border town with Nigeria, Diffa. In their hangout, the gang explained their association with the sect. “They have paid 500,000 Nigerian naira ($3,085, £1,835) to those of us who followed them over there. The rest of us, here, we give them information. When they come, we inform them about what’s going on, what the security forces are up to. If they tell you to set off a bomb and it succeeds, if it kills a lot of people, they will pay you a lot of money,”one of the young men said.


Five members of this gang in Diffa, near the border, have joined the group; two have since been killed on operations, he said.


But the ideals for which Boko Haram is fighting – the imposition of strict Sharia, an Islamist caliphate and the banning of Western education – hold no interest for the gang, the report continued.


One of the gang members said, “Boko Haram Islamist militants from Nigeria regularly come across the border, looking for recruits. We can’t contact them, they come to us.”


The documentary showed about a dozen gang members in a tiny, dark room, built with local mud-bricks in the town, with a couple of home made stools and weights for them to exercise just outside the door.


Already, Nigeria’s neighbouring countries – Niger, Cameroon and Chad – are fearful that the group’s insurgency may spill over to their borders.


The Diffa government believes that the emergency rule in place in north-eastern states of Nigeria has not changed anything over the last year.


“It has radicalised Boko Haram more than anything else and generated other gangs and groups of bandits,” one official said.


Asked if they agree with Boko Haram’s reason for fighting, the gang answered in unison: “No. We only do it for the money.”


The boys who do not share the Boko Haram ideology of opposing anything western, were reportedly in skinny jeans, bright coloured T-shirts and shiny chains – like those seen around the necks of American rappers on music videos.


“Their attitude and brand new clothes make them stand out when they walk down the dusty streets of Diffa. The fashion style is clearly inspired by Western consumerism rather than Islamist militancy,” the report said.


“The gang members agreed to talk to us on the condition that we would not reveal their identity.


“We break into houses for cash; sometimes we beat people for money, we steal their animals so we can eat and then we gather up and take Tramol [an opiate drug], smoke ganja [marijuana] and drink alcohol,” one said.


“We have no jobs; some of us are still at high school but we need money. Violence has become a form of work for us.”


The young gang members also showed BBC a stash of machetes, knives, knuckle-dusters and traditional axes. They also claimed to have firearms and grenades but refused to show them.


Boko Haram has also been attacking the Niger region, an official told the BBC, adding that several attacks allegedly planned by the sect on the country’s territory have been foiled over the last months; and dozens of men suspected to have links to the group have been arrested.


Niger’s customs and national guards patrol along the porous border every day but the report said the Nigerian soldiers are yet to join the joint border patrols with their counterparts from Niger. The trading post of Krikri is seeing many Nigerians arrive seeking safety adding that some have relatives on the other side of the border.


“We know that Boko Haram members come across the border, but we are watching them closely,” Diffa government representative Inoussa Saouna, says.


“Just last December, we arrested two dozens of men – we believe they were planning to kidnap the regional governor, the military zone commander and myself.”


Military police, customs officers, as well as national guards conduct daily patrols along the porous border to mitigate the threat, BBC said.


“On paper, the border is supposed to be secured by joint patrols with soldiers from both countries. However, they have yet to start.


“Niger’s security forces are receiving training, logistics and intelligence support from both the US and France. Most of the border between Niger and Nigeria is naturally drawn by the Komadougou Yobe River.


Niger has a growing refugee crisis but without camps, which the authorities are reluctant to allow, fearing they could become new targets, or worse, recruitment centres for Boko Haram.


Culled from BBC



Boko Haram pays N500,000 to Niger recruits — Gang members