The Nigeria Customs Service , National Drug Law Enforcement Agency , and Department of State Services have seized a type of drug identified as one of the most notorious stimulants being taken by ISIS terrorists and other violent insurgents in the Middle East.Captagon, popularly known as Fenethylline, is also called"The Amphetamine Fuelling Syria's War" or"The Jihadists' Drug" by the media.
Area Commander of Apapa Command, Comptroller Malanta Yusuf, disclosed this in a statement signed by the Public Relations Officer of the command, Abubakar Usman, in Lagos on Wednesday. The crime was busted through a joint operation involving the NCS, NDLEA, and DSS after they dismantled the machine and deployed sniffer dogs for assistance.
“One suspect in connection with the seizure was arrested while further examination and counting are ongoing before more details will be released,” he said.
The southerners are just busy speaking English and media houses are busy reporting rubbish while the north is war ready! Oooh Nnamdi Kanu. Who sold u out?
Which one be jihadist drugs again Anyone wey them get let them bring it be like dis people don dey crazy
Kudos... this is what we expect from our security agencies at this time. Thank you and stay safe.
SamuelHero6 But Nnamdi Kanu told you people that they have surrounded Lagos.
Tonnes of this drug made it way from Syria to Italy last month
Like play like play o....
South are busy - gossiping, north are preparing for WAR. When they hit south unaware many will convert by force, to many is impossible. What strategy have they got against people with AK47s, none. Just talking rubbish.
Nigeria Latest News, Nigeria Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Source: DailyPostNGR - 🏆 11. / 59 Read more »
Source: GuardianNigeria - 🏆 1. / 94 Read more »
Source: LeadershipNGA - 🏆 4. / 77 Read more »
Source: PremiumTimesng - 🏆 3. / 78 Read more »
Source: MobilePunch - 🏆 8. / 63 Read more »
Source: GuardianNigeria - 🏆 1. / 94 Read more »