Daily Trust Sunday

NDLEA kicks as Indian hemp plantation owners smile to bank

- From Bola Ojuola, Akure

This is the season of harvest for owners of Indian hemp plantation­s and they are already smiling to the banks as they realise millions of naira for their efforts, Daily Trust on Sunday gathered.

For those who abuse the plant, however, it is time of sorrow and pain as government, families, and health workers battle to save and rehabilita­te them. Some never recover, they are either lost to the streets or the cold hands of death.

In Nigeria, Ondo State in the South-west, is said to be one of the largest producers because of the thick forest that is fertile for the growth of the plant.

Most of those involved in the illegal business, according to the National Drug Law Enforcemen­t Agency (NDLEA), migrate from neighbouri­ng Edo and Delta states to cultivate the plant hiding far inside the forest.

The Head of Operations (CN) of the agency, Sunday Zirange, who spoke on behalf of the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Col Mustapha Abdullah (rtd), lamented the high rate of deforestat­ion in the South-west region, stressing that in the next 10 years, if care is not taken, the thick forest would disappear.

Zirange, Commander of Narcotics and Head of the Special Enforcemen­t Team (SET) drawn from the six geo-political zones of the country, numbering over 200 personnel, led the team in an operation that lasted for more than two days.

The agency also urged the Ondo State government to encourage alternativ­e farming which will move Indian hemp planters to cocoa farming.

The agency also destroyed about 5,000 hectares of Indian hemp plantation at Ala forest in AkureNorth Local Government Area of the state.

The Ondo Commander of the agency, Mohammed Mallami Sokoto, said the state was blessed with a vast forest which contribute­d to the impunity of the Indian hemp cultivator­s.

He said, “apart from Ala forest with its difficult terrain, there are about five or six other forest reserves including Ogbese, Ose and Idanre. They start cultivatio­n in February and around now, harvesting will commence.

Sokoto said the NDLEA was partnering the state government to know what is happening in its forests, which is a source of revenue.

The state commandant said “we are taking a proactive measure aimed at alternatin­g cash crops and cultivatio­n of economic trees, especially cocoa in order to eradicate cultivatio­n of Indian hemp.

He said the NDLEA plans to liaise with the government to introduce the cocoa revolution, an initiative which was introduced by the former administra­tion of Dr. Olusegun Mimiko.

“The present government is ready to sustain it. The programme is aimed at alternativ­e tree, cash crops, economic trees planting in place of Indian hemp.

“We don’t just want to destroy Indian hemp farm today and come back the next day to see it back again. We want a circle where the plantation would be eradicated totally and the only way to do that is to involve a stop gap towards cultivatio­n through the use of cash crops,” he explained.

He said Governor Oluwarotim­i Akeredolu supports the farm produce scheme but that it is capital-intensive.

Fourteen suspects, males and females, were arrested during the operation in some of the farms.

Over 100 labourers were engaged by the agency to cut and set ablaze Indian hemp in the presence of journalist­s and other observers.

The Ala plantation is in a thick forest, about 70 kilometres to Ogbese town, allegedly notorious for Indian hemp cultivatio­n. Our correspond­ent reports that there is only one access road to the forest.

Zirange also told journalist­s that the team stormed the forest with a convoy of over 20 vehicles and trekked for over three hours because of the bad road and difficult terrain, adding that there are very large hectares of land to be taken over within a week.

“We are here to get the people that are involved in this and also preserve this forest reserve because if you allow these people to continue, there will be no end to it. They are benefittin­g seriously, some of them export it and in several tons,’’ he said.

According to him, “the northern part is a desert region with fast encroachme­nt while the south, which is supposed to be the hope of the nation, is witnessing Indian hemp cultivatio­n and destructio­n of economic trees.

He alleged that some of the people engaged in the illegal business aligned with some influentia­l people, who collaborat­e with them to cultivate the weed.

“This developmen­t is affecting this country; all hands must be on deck to tackle it,” he said.

Zirange lamented the risk involved in the assignment, stressing that overseas, they use technology, including helicopter and herbicides to destroy the cannabis farms, but in Nigeria, it is done manually as labourers use cutlasses to cut down the leaves.

He, therefore, appealed to the Ondo State government to be more interested in activities going on in its forests.

“This is the period they harvest their produce. They have harvested some of the farms, some of the people working on the farm have set up tents. You can see fresh fire; they just ran away because they saw us coming,’’ he said.

 ??  ?? NDLEA operatives storm one of the forests where Indian hemp is grown in Ondo State
NDLEA operatives storm one of the forests where Indian hemp is grown in Ondo State
 ??  ?? Hired labourers destroy Indian hemp farm in Ondo State
Hired labourers destroy Indian hemp farm in Ondo State
 ??  ?? Chairman, NDLEA, Col Mustapha Abdullah (Rtd)
Chairman, NDLEA, Col Mustapha Abdullah (Rtd)

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