Eight Nigerian men said to be drug barons face the death sentence or life in jail in Cambodia after narcotic authorities in that country discovered that they were running a drug cartel inside a Mountain of Fire and Miracle Church in Phnom Penh, the capital of the Asian country.
In a report carried by TCD, the eight men, Nnamezie
Victor, Francis Nnamdi, Sunday Nwabuisi, Tony Mmaduka Chukwuonye,
Okorom Kizito, Favour Nnabuife Okorom, Maduka Simon Ukandu, and Izuchukwu Chukwuma, and a Cambodian woman, Mam Vinyong,
were accused dealing in crystal methamphetamine from the church, with
the Vinyong claiming she had no idea that the smart phone boxes she
delivered to the church in 2014 were filled with drugs.
The
police claimed that during investigations, Vinyong admitted to
delivering smart phone boxes for Chukwuonye who was her boyfriend, but
claimed she was unaware that there were drugs inside.
Vinyong
claimed that she and Chukwuonye had became close after meeting at the
church following the end of her previous relationship, and that he had
paid for powdered milk for her baby.
In her lead evidence, Vinyong said:
"At
the end of October and early November, I delivered the goods two or
three times, and in December, I delivered them one more time. I was paid
$100 per day for acting as a courier. Mr. Tony just told me they
contained valuable objects and I thought they might be brand-new
smartphones."
But the Bureau Chief at the Interior Ministry’s anti-drug department, Roeung Pheap, refuted Vinyong’s claim of innocence, saying she was part of the team and knew exactly what she was ferrying for them.
"Before
we went to arrest her, our undercover officers reported that she was
delivering the drugs to other dealers, and we know Mr. Tony was the one
who often ordered her to do it," he said.
The pleas of the Nigerians were denied while they are to await their verdicts on September 12, 2016.
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