A Pakistani man identified as Sahid  Mahmood has been arrested after he 
was smuggled into Nigeria through a bush path in Etung, a  border 
community with Cameroon, Vanguard reports.
Mahmood is to be thoroughly screened by the  Nigerian Immigration 
Service and other security agencies to ensure he is not on the wanted 
list of any country before repatriation.
Speaking to Vanguard in her office in Calabar on 
Friday, the Cross River State Comptroller of the Nigeria Immigration 
Service,  Mrs Funke Adeuyi said that Sahid was smuggled on a motor cycle
 through bush path into Etung from  where he went to Ikom and was on his
 way to Lagos when he was  intercepted by border Immigration officials 
at the village of Yahe, in  Yala Local Government Area of the state. 
"We are collaborating with other security agencies to thoroughly screen the man to make sure he is not on the wanted list of any country before he is sent back to his country because we have to be vigilant during this critical time in the country why should somebody from Pakistan want to come into the country through bush path"
Mrs Adeuyi added that the Pakistani man was arrested along with a 
Cameroonian  accomplice, Nji Hagis Chi who said he met Sahid at the bus 
station in  Ikom and decided to function as his guide to Lagos where he 
was going  for an undisclosed reason.
"He was not found with anything incriminating but had enough hard currency on him to do anything he wanted to do so we are wary of his movement in Nigeria because he has no reason to be in this country"
She said the man only had documents that took him to the Duala Airport  
in Cameroon but was smuggled into Nigeria suspiciously therefore  
thorough security checks would be carried out on him and his accomplice 
before they are repatriated to their countries.
Mrs Adeuyi disclosed that there are several illegal routes through which
 people  access the country and warned motorist to desist from adding 
and  abetting those who come into the country through illegal routes 
owing to obvious security risk. 
Source: Vanguard

 
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