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EFCC Chairman, Ola Olukoyede
The Executive Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Mr. Ola Olukoyede has raised the alarm that organised foreign fraud syndicates are establishing cells in Nigerian cities.
He also said the criminals are recruiting young Nigerians into serious organised cybercrimes, including cryptocurrency fraud.
A statement released on Wednesday by the EFCC’s Head of Media and Publicity, Dele Oyewale, said Olukoyede disclosed this
while receiving participants of the Executive Intelligence Management Course, EIMC 18 of the National Institute for Security Studies, led by the Director of Studies, Hyginus Ngele to the Commission.
“Another dimension that is not given attention is the discovery, recently, that organized foreign fraud syndicates are establishing cells in Nigerian cities and recruiting young Nigerians into serious organized cybercrimes, including cryptocurrency fraud,” he said.
Speaking further, he stated that by virtue of EFCC’s recent discovery “We are beginning to see the likelihood, the propensity that a lot of these people are into illegal importation of arms into the country using cryptocurrency as means of payment. And this is an area that must interest all of u.
“In the special operations we carried out in Lagos recently, we arrested 194 foreigners in the heart of Victoria Island. One hundred and ninety-four of them, Chinese, Filipinos, Eastern Europeans, Tunisians, and the like in one building at a time. You can imagine what these guys are doing, 194 of them. Some of them don’t even have valid visas, and most of the financial activities they carried out they did through cryptocurrency.
“Another thing that we discovered is that some of the foreigners we arrested were already ex-convicts in their countries. Some of them have been convicted and escaped from their countries and found safe haven in Africa, not only Nigeria. We discovered that they are also developing cells in some other African countries by virtue of the investigation we are carrying out,” he said.
Olukoyede also expressed surprise at how bandits and insurgents are able to sustain their activities over the years, stressing that the flow of small arms and light weapons across our borders and the involvement of non-state actors in the illegal exploitation of minerals in parts of the country all compound the threats in the security landscape.
The EFCC’s boss called for spirited efforts at both national and continental levels to combat the menace of internet fraudsters, stressing that the money laundering and national security dimension of the presence of foreign organised crime groups demands close scrutiny.
“All security, intelligence and law enforcement organisations in Nigeria and indeed Africa, must close ranks in dealing with this challenge,” he said.
Olukoyede decried the fact that Nigeria, for nearly two decades, has been besieged by all manners of security challenges ranging from insurgency, banditry, kidnapping for ransom and farmer/herder clashes, which he partly blamed on activities of non-state actors. Specifically, he noted that the role of non-state actors in stoking the embers of security and corruption challenges has not been fully interrogated.
“At the level of the EFCC, we have always been suspicious of the activities of non-state actors in the areas where we are challenged security-wise. In the Northeast, for instance, the activities of local and international NGOs have been under focus. This was a major impetus for the decision to mandate their registration with SCUML, Special Control Unit against Money Laundering, a department in EFCC, and a clear directive to notify the Commission on cash movements within the region,” he said.
Earlier in his speech, NISS Commandant, Joseph Obule Odama who spoke through Ngele praised Olukoyede’s leadership of the EFCC for the Commission’s “remarkable achievements in combating corruption, money laundering, and other financial crimes,” noting that the achievements “have not only strengthened Nigeria’s integrity but have also served as a model for other nations in Africa and beyond.”
He further noted that the EFCC, under Olukoyede, has been at the forefront of investigating and prosecuting financial crimes, including those involving non-state actors.
“Your Commission’s exploratory activities have uncovered the intricate networks through which some NGOs and other entities channel funds to support hostile non-state actors, thereby fueling instability in various parts of the country and the African Continent.”