Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024

Boch News

We Report as it is

Failed Laws Bane of Rising Drug Abuse – NDLEA

2 min read
Share this story

by Our Correspondent

The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has blamed the rising cases of drug abuse on failed laws in Nigeria.

The NDLEA Commander of Narcotics, Shehu Dankolo, disclosed this yesterday, February 25th in Abuja, during a campaign for students of Fuad Lababidi Islamic Academy.

The campaign themed ‘Drug is An Enemy: Say No. It Destroys’, was aimed at taking care of social vices like drug abuse in the society, according to him.

Dankolo who revealed that recent statistics indicates that 40 per cent of Nigerian youths between 18 and 35 years were deeply involved in the abuse of drugs, described the statistics as worrisome.

He said: “I look at how safe China and Singapore are. Until we take the drug law very serious, we can’t get it right. We can’t just be a government agency, which will arrest, and when you take them to where laws are made, they are given three months, after which they come out and continue the trade.

“There is a traditional leader that was arrested on drug use and nothing was done. Because they observed there are no laws, they go and perpetrate the crime and come out free. A medical doctor was arrested last year 2021 in Edo State. What came out of it?”

In his contribution, Director-General of National Orientation Agency (NOA), Dr. Garba Abari, who was represented by the Director of Public Enlightenment and Mass Mobilisation, Mrs. Ruth Ogun, noted that the agency had been sensitizing youths against drug addiction, political thuggery, kidnapping. radicalization, violent extremism and ritual killing as well as general threat to social cohesion in order to address the challenges.

According to her: “NOA decided to partner with NDLEA as a major stakeholder to tackle issues of drug abuse. We believe that when they talk from their own perspective and we talk from value perspective, it will balance up to turn out new citizens for the country.

“This programme is highly imperative due to the pervasive and disturbing nature of drug abuse and vices related to it, which pose great threat to social cohesion and order in the country.”


Share this story

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © 2020 CHIMARIK GROUP LIMITED. All rights reserved.
Social media & sharing icons powered by UltimatelySocial
error

Enjoy this blog? Please spread the word :)