NDLEA DISMANTLES ABUJA DRUG BUNKS, ARRESTS 132, RECOVERS 220KG ILLICIT SUBSTANCES. (PHOTOS). #PRESS RELEASE.

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 NDLEA dismantles Abuja drug bunks, arrests 132, recovers 220kg illicit substances  -Marwa hails operation, vows to sustain crackdown in FCT, other states  In a non-stop two-week offensive action against traffickers and dealers, operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have successfully dismantled several drug joints and bunks within and around the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja where a total of 132 suspects were arrested and 220 kilograms of assorted illicit substances recovered. The wel-coordinated raids jointly conducted by the Agency's Directorate of Operations and General Investigation (DOGI) and the FCT Strategic Command from llth to 25th April 2026 were launched to dismantle illicit drug hubs contributing to substance abuse, trafficking, and associated criminal activities in the capital city after weeks of intelligence and surveillance across all identified hotspots. Areas where notorious drug joints were raided, dismantled and suspects...

LAWMA URGES DILIGENCE IN MEDIA REPORTING AS IT CLARIFIES OPERATIONAL REALITIES. (PHOTO). #PRESS RELEASE.


 LAWMA URGES DILIGENCE IN MEDIA REPORTING AS IT CLARIFIES OPERATIONAL REALITIES


The Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) has urged media organisations to exercise diligence and contextual accuracy in reporting on waste management operations as it clarifies the operational framework guiding solid waste collection and disposal across Lagos State.


The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of LAWMA, Dr. Muyiwa Gbadegesin stated this on Friday while responding to recent media reports on waste evacuation challenges in parts of the state.


He explained that routine household waste collection was executed by licensed Private Sector Participant (PSP) operators under strict regulatory supervision and performance monitoring, contrary to assertions that LAWMA was directly responsible for carting away municipal solid waste from households.


“LAWMA enforces defined service benchmarks and maintenance standards while activating targeted interventions wherever performance gaps are identified. I urge residents to report service gaps whenever they observe them,” he said.


Dr. Gbadegesin clarified that compactor trucks deployed for residential evacuation were owned and operated by PSP operators, adding that LAWMA inscriptions on the vehicles served regulatory identification purposes and not sign of institutional ownership.


He affirmed that all designated landfill facilities across Lagos State remained operational, professionally managed, and fully accessible to licensed operators for seamless and compliant waste disposal.


The Managing Director said that waste management in the burgeoning Lagos Megacity of over 22 million people should be viewed through the prism of ongoing reforms in the sector, including the optimisation of Transfer Loading Stations (TLS) to improve fleet turnaround time and operational efficiency, as well as the expansion of Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) as part of the State’s transition toward a circular economy anchored on recycling, resource recovery, and reduced landfill dependency.


He called for concerted efforts from both government and residents in ensuring a cleaner city, noting that waste management in the state remained challenged by rapid urbanisation, uncontrolled migration, and behavioural practices that undermine compliance.


He warned that indiscriminate dumping and the patronage of illegal cart pushers undermined structured waste operations, reaffirming that LAWMA’s ongoing reforms in infrastructure, enforcement, and logistics modernisation were designed to deliver a cleaner, safer, and more sustainable Lagos.

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