THISDAY

Traffickin­g of Opioid Pills Used by Boko Haram Suicide Bombers Soars in Sahel...

- Michael Olugbode in Maiduguri with agency report

The United Nations has warned of a rise in traffickin­g of the synthetic opioid tramadol across West Africa, as one official revealed it is being found in the pockets of suicide bombers.

The warning came as suicide attack on an internally displaced persons (IDPs) camp in Pulka village, in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State has left three persons dead and seven others injured, an aid worker, Bukar Amin told THISDAY.

Seizures of the drug have skyrockete­d since 2013, from 300kg (660lb) to more than three tonnes a year, the UN’s Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said.

In September, three million pills in UN-logoed boxes were found in Niger.

The opioid is known to be popular with Islamist militants Boko Haram.

The pills - which can be legally prescribed as painkiller­s - are thought to be used to calm the would-be attackers, with The Guardian previously reporting that the terrorist group stuff it into dates which they then feed to children before sending them to their deaths.

Some 600,000 pills bound for the group were seized on the NigeriaCam­eroon border in August.

Pierre Lapaque, the UNODC’s West and Central Africa representa­tive, warned the situation could not be allowed to “get any further out of control”, as it continues to undermine global security.

“Tramadol is regularly found in the pockets of suspects arrested for terrorism in the Sahel, or who have committed suicidal attack,” Lapaque said.

“This raises the question of who provides the tablets to fighters from Boko Haram and al-Qaeda, including young boys and girls, preparing to commit suicide bombings.”

The UNODC said the abuse of the drug - usually smuggled from Asia through the Gulf by criminal gangs - is escalating into a major health crisis in the Sahel, particular­ly in northern Mali and Niger, with sub-Saharan Africa’s young population potentiall­y providing trafficker­s with an even larger market.

One woman in northern Mali told the agency she regularly saw children little older than 10 walking around “after taking or being given pills in their tea in order to help reduce their feeling of hunger.”

People taking the drug illegally are thought use a dose up to five times higher than usual medical prescripti­ons, the UNODC added. Three Killed, Seven Injured in Suicide Attack on IDPs Camp

Meanwhile, suicide attack on an IDP camp in Pulka village, in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State has left three persons dead and seven others injured.

According to an aid worker, Bukar Amin, he said: “A suicide bomber came to the entrance of Camp 4 around 11a.m. on Monday morning and detonated the explosives strapped to her body and at the last count, we have three deaths and seven injured persons.”

Another official, Bunu Bukar

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