
The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) have intensified their partnership to tackle the interconnected issues of human trafficking, drug trafficking, and substance abuse.
The commitment was made when the Director General of NAPTIP, Binta Lami Adamu Bello, led her management team on a courtesy visit to the Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa, at the Agency’s National Headquarters in Abuja on Friday, April 25, 2025.
This was contained in a statement made available to Thelensng by the Director of Media and Advocacy at NDLEA, Mr. Femi Babafemi.
Speaking during the meeting, Marwa congratulated Bello on her well-deserved appointment to lead such an important agency as NAPTIP and commended her for hitting the ground running.
His words: “There’s a linkage between human trafficking and drug trafficking and abuse. Some trafficked persons are used as mules, some may know, some may not know, they may give them drugs, sewn into their bag, and they can be drugged to be compliant, to do what they want. So, this is an area that we should collaborate further by signing an MoU that will actually bring about definite and unambiguous areas of collaboration.”
He assured her of NDLEA’s preparedness to deepen collaboration with NAPTIP – and named a three-member liaison team that will work with the team from NAPTIP on agreed areas of partnership.
Earlier in her remarks, the NAPTIP boss stressed the importance of deepened partnership between the two agencies to the disruption of criminal networks involved in human and drug trafficking as well as substance abuse.
“Drug trafficking and human trafficking are increasingly connected, both globally and locally. Women and children are used as drug couriers. Victims are also drugged and subjected to substance abuse as a method of control when they are trafficked.
“Furthermore, both crimes thrive on similar enablers, that is, porous borders, corruption, poverty, weak institutions, and digital space. Intelligence reports have shown overlaps in networks operating in both spheres, hence the urgent need for a coordinated response. We believe that there is immense potential for deepened collaboration between NAPTIP and NDLEA .
“Some actionable areas could include joint investigation and intelligence sharing, capacity building and cross-training, victim-centered approach, technology and data integration, public enlightenment and preventive advocacy, and legal reforms,” Bello said.
She further stated: “And this could be achieved, by our proposal of the next steps to be taken, that is, setting up of a liaison team to develop NAPTIP-NDLEA strategic action plan for the short to medium term activities, schedule bilateral meetings to review our operation partnership at least once or twice a year, and explore opportunities for international collaboration, which we are all aware that the two agencies are closely partnering with various international organizations.
“I want to affirm that NAPTIP is fully committed to partnership, professionalism, and patriotic service. We believe that together we will not only disrupt criminal networks, but also protect and empower vulnerable Nigerians who are often the ultimate victims of these crimes.”