The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has assured the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) of further support and renewed partnership in its ongoing effort to rid the country of substance abuse and illicit drug trafficking.
The assurance was given on Wednesday, when the new Country Representative of UNODC in Nigeria, Mr Cheikh Ousmane Toure, led a team of his top officials on a courtesy visit to the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the NDLEA, Brig-Gen Mohamed Marwa (Rtd), at the Agency’s National Headquarters in Abuja.
While acknowledging the leadership role the NDLEA plays in drug law enforcement in Africa and particularly the West African sub-region, the UNODC chief said his visit was to re-engage with the Agency on how to cascade the successes recorded at the national level to the states because the drug scourge is at the basis of most of the security challenges at the subnational level.
According to him, “It is very important for us to re-engage and re-energise the relationship between UNODC and NDLEA, and I think that me coming here today is to tell you I want to re-engage and reinvigorate our relationship so that it serves Nigeria as a whole and also the rest of this sub-region by following your lead.
“NDLEA has been our partner and even facilitated our implementation in Nigeria. So, I want a re-engagement of UNODC with NDLEA to see how together we can develop a greater plan to support the remaining implementation of the master plan and going forward, the new stages of engagement with Nigeria.
“And one thing that we want to look at is how NDLEA can provide increased capacity building to West African member countries so that together we fight this menace and share best practices.”
In his remarks, Marwa appreciated the global body for its support to the agency over the years and expressed confidence that the new Country Representative will take the existing relationship to a new height.
The NDLEA boss said the visit by the team provided the opportunity to present before them some of the areas they should consider in their support for the agency and asked the UNODC to support the agency’s Alternative Development Programme, which is the first in Africa, aimed at providing alternative means of livelihood for cannabis growers.
“The drug use survey is another project that we need support for. The one published in 2018 is quite stale, and we need a reassessment, and I remember two or three years ago in Vienna, I spoke to the Director of UNODC directly on the need. Happily, now it’s in your sights, I understand. So, that’s a most welcome development for us to reassess, to see what is the prevalence now, and what are the new trends and so on and so forth.
“The National Drug Control Master Plan is another area of need. The current master plan is 2021-2025. Another one is due. So, that’s certainly one more area that we would work together towards. Then capacity building and training. This is key to our work, because in every organisation, the bottom line is the personnel,” the NDLEA boss said.
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