Tag: India

  • Indian Police Arrest Nigerian After Cocaine Allegedly Found Hidden in Bread Loaves

    Indian Police Arrest Nigerian After Cocaine Allegedly Found Hidden in Bread Loaves

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-25 10:40:00

    From coverage by Punch, India’s Central Crime Branch arrested a 29-year-old Nigerian national after police said they seized 121 grams of cocaine allegedly concealed inside loaves of bread, with the drugs valued at about ₹1.2 crore.

    The report describes the method as an attempt to evade detection during transport from Mumbai to Bengaluru, reflecting how traffickers increasingly disguise narcotics inside everyday consumer items.

    In The Indian Express report on the case, authorities said the woman allegedly trafficked cocaine “concealing it in bread loaves,” and noted she had entered India on a student visa after police acted on intelligence.

    The Times of India also reported the incident as “cocaine cleverly concealed within loaves of bread,” adding that the buyer linked to the case had since been deported—underscoring a broader enforcement posture on narcotics networks.

    Echotitbits take: Beyond the sensational hiding method, the bigger issue is diaspora vulnerability—where immigration status and informal networks can fuel cross-border crime narratives that hurt legitimate Nigerians abroad. Watch for follow-up arrests and how consular channels engage to ensure due process.

    Source: The Punch — December 24, 2025 (https://punchng.com/indian-police-arrest-nigerian-student-for-hiding-cocaine-in-bread-loaves/?amp=)

    The Punch 2025-12-24

  • Nigeria posts ₦6.69tr Q3 trade surplus as exports stay ahead of imports

    Nigeria posts ₦6.69tr Q3 trade surplus as exports stay ahead of imports

    2025-12-15 08:00:00

    According to The Punch, Nigeria recorded a ₦6.69 trillion trade surplus in Q3 2025, with exports of about ₦22.81tn outweighing imports of about ₦16.12tn, continuing a run of positive trade balances.

    Punch quotes analysts attributing the performance to FX-market reforms, liberalisation and currency adjustments that improved export competitiveness while making some imports more costly.

    The report notes crude oil remained the dominant export, while stakeholders called for policy consistency and deeper non-oil export expansion to sustain gains.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: A sustained surplus can ease external financing pressure, but it matters what’s driving it—higher export value-add or simply weaker import demand. Watch non-oil export momentum, crude output stability, and how FX policy affects manufacturers’ input costs.

    Source: The Guardian Nigeria News — December 12, 2025

    Photo credit/source: The Guardian Nigeria News

    The Guardian Nigeria News https://guardian.ng/business-services/nigeria-records-trade-surplus-of-n6-9tr-in-q2-2024-nbs/ December 12, 2025

  • India Deports 32 Nigerians After Drug Crackdown

    India Deports 32 Nigerians After Drug Crackdown

    Indian authorities have deported 32 Nigerians linked to a transnational narcotics network following arrests in a multi-state crackdown.

    The development may renew diaspora and consular conversations around criminal networks, profiling concerns and lawful migration pathways.

    Source: Punch, 2025-12-09

  • India records over 30,000 coronavirus deaths as US tops 4m cases

    India records over 30,000 coronavirus deaths as US tops 4m cases

    Official data reveals that Coronavirus death toll in India has now surpass number of fatalities in France on Friday with 30,601 deaths and nearly 50,000 new cases overnight.

    According to AFP tally, the figure of coronavirus death in India is the sixth-biggest behind the US, Brazil, Britain, Mexico and Italy.

    Having the third-highest caseload with almost 1.3 million infections, the country has in the past 24 hours recorded 740 new deaths from the virus and 49,310 fresh infections, health ministry revealed.

    READ ALSO: More than 10,000 health workers in Africa infected with COVID-19 – WHO

    But many experts say that with testing levels low, the extent of the pandemic across the world’s second-most populous country may be far worse than officially reported.

    A antibody study commissioned by the government showed this week that almost a quarter of people in the capital New Delhi have had the virus — almost 40 times the official number.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government imposed one of the world’s strictest lockdowns in late March, but it has been steadily eased to lessen the devastating economic impact of the pandemic.

    State governments have brought in fresh restrictions as cases soar in Bangalore and away from the big cities in Bihar, West Bengal, Kashmir and parts of Tamil Nadu.

    Southern Kerala state, earlier hailed as a success story and which has already imposed partial restrictions, may decide on Monday to impose a full statewide lockdown, reports said.

    In the United States the coronavirus pandemic hit grim new milestones on Thursday as cases topped four million and in Europe, three million, as fresh spikes from Belgium to Tokyo to Melbourne forced new restrictions on citizens.

    While EU lawmakers combed through a huge aid package for their economies, the UN called for a basic income for the world’s poorest to help slow the spread of the pandemic, and the Red Cross warned of “massive” new migration caused by the economic devastation.

    The United States, the hardest-hit country in the pandemic, added one million new cases in just over two weeks, according to a tracker maintained by Johns Hopkins University. There have been more than 143,000 US deaths overall.

    READ ALSO: NDDC Contracts: Akpabio claims he was misunderstood by NASS

    The country has seen a coronavirus surge, particularly in southern and western states, as Texas, California, Alabama, Idaho and Florida all announced record one-day death tolls.

    Meanwhile, the European continent now accounts for a fifth of the world’s more than 15 million cases and remains the hardest hit in terms of deaths, with 206,633 out of 627,307 worldwide.

    A 750-billion-euro post-coronavirus recovery plan was hammered out at an EU summit this week, where fiscally rigid nations butted heads with hard-hit countries like Spain and Italy that have called for huge aid grants.

    AFP