News: Cleaner caught with N53m at Lagos Airport
An airport cleaner has been arrested
with the sum of $271,135 (about N53m) at the Murtala Muhammed
International Airport, Lagos, it has been learnt.
The suspect was arrested by the aviation
security personnel of the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria while
trying to carry the huge sum of money through the screening point.
The airport worker, named Mr. Tijani
Owolabi, works with one of the cleaning contractors at the airport,
according to a FAAN statement.
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The
statement quoted the Deputy General Manager, Corporate Affairs, FAAN,
Mr. Onyekwere Nnaekpe, as saying that some of the foreign currency was
found on Owolabi while the rest was recovered from the sanitary bucket
he was holding while trying to pass through screening machine.
Nnaekpe said the agency suspected that Owolabi was conveying the currency to an accomplice at the airside of the airport.
The statement by the FAAN read in part,
“Aviation security personnel of the Federal Airports Authority of
Nigeria today September 3, 2015 prevented the trafficking of a total sum
of 271,135 American dollars through the Murtala Muhammed Airport,
Ikeja.
“The sum was found on a worker with one
of the cleaning contractors at the airport, Mr. Tijani Owolabi, during a
pat down at one of the screening points at ‘D’ Finger of the
international terminal.
“The airport cleaner who was suspected
to be conveying the foreign currency to an accomplice at the sterile
area of the terminal, was immediately apprehended by aviation security
staff on duty and handed over to the appropriate security agencies at
the airport for further investigation.”
The development came barely two weeks
after an Arik Air flight attendant, Mr. Chika Udensi, was arrested at
Heathrow Airport in London with 20 kilogrammes of cocaine.
The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency
later arrested his accomplice, Oliver Ikechukwu Chibuzor Oliver, an
Arik Air catering worker, who smuggled the drug among catering supplies
into the aircraft for Udensi.
NDLEA and other security agencies said
they had increased security surveillance at the nation’s airports,
especially the international airports.