Investigation

Nigerian army intercepts truckload of ammunition being smuggled into South-east

Nigerian army intercepts truckload of ammunition being smuggled into South-east

Troops of the Nigerian Army, intercepted an international smuggling syndicate while transporting a truckload of smuggled ammunition to Anambra State, Nigeria’s south-east.

Army spokesperson, Onyema Nwachukwu, disclosed this in a statement. Mr Nwachukwu, a brigadier-general, said the troops, acting on a tip-off, made the interception during a meticulous and rigorous stop and search operation along Ajilete-Owode Road in Yewa North Local Government Area of Ogun State, south-west Nigeria.

The army spokesperson said the truck- with registration number ENU 697 XY- was loaded with different ammunition.

He listed the ammunition to include 720 packets of red star cartridges of 12 calibres which contained 25 cartridges per packet, totalling 18,000 cartridges, 250 packets of live black cartridges containing ten packets each and totalling 2500 cartridges of the same calibre.

Mr Nwachukwu said the troops had arrested two suspects and were helping in investigations by the military.

He gave the suspects names as Eric Seworvor, a Ghanaian national, and Lukman Sani, the truck driver.

Information gathered during preliminary investigation revealed that the ammunition, which was surreptitiously concealed in a supposed empty truck, was imported from Mali via Idiroko International Border, where the criminals had successfully beaten several other checkpoints en route their final destination in Onitsha, Anambra State, where they intended to deliver the illegal ammunition.

The army spokesperson said it took the intervention of the troops to stop the syndicate from smuggling the illegal weapons into the South-east state, stressing that the suspects would have unleashed terror on residents of the region if they had succeeded.

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