INTERPOL tracks down 150 stolen vehicles from Canada to Nigeria, other African countries
The INTERPOL has cracked down on car theft, resulting in the total discovery of 150 stolen vehicles, primarily from Canada, being smuggled into Nigeria and other West African nations.
Operation Safe Wheels discovered 150 stolen cars, primarily from Canada, smuggled into Nigeria and other West African nations
INTERPOL's Stolen Motor Vehicle database revealed that most stolen vehicles detected originated from countries like Canada, France, Germany, and the Netherlands
The operation involved 12 West African countries, including Ghana and Nigeria, and targeted the illicit trade of stolen vehicles
The discovery came during an INTERPOL operation code-named Operation Safe Wheels, a two-week initiative in March 2025 involving 12 West African countries, including Ghana and Nigeria, which uncovered dozens of stolen vehicles across the region.
The operation has led to the seizure of more than 75 vehicles so far.
Globally, hundreds of thousands of vehicles are stolen every year, often becoming part of a larger illicit trade.
According to INTERPOL, most stolen vehicles detected through their database originated from countries like Canada, with others reported stolen in France, Germany, and the Netherlands.
In 2024 alone, around 270,000 vehicles were identified as stolen worldwide using INTERPOL's Stolen Motor Vehicle (SMV) database. This database enables police in 196 member countries to instantly verify if a suspicious vehicle has been reported stolen.
David Caunter, Director of Organized and Emerging Crime at INTERPOL, emphasized the significance of the SMV database, saying:
" Each year, hundreds of thousands of vehicles are stolen around the world, yet the initial theft is often only the beginning of a vehicle's journey into the global criminal underworld."
" Stolen vehicles are trafficked across the globe, traded for drugs and other illicit commodities, enriching organized crime groups and even terrorists. INTERPOL's SMV database is the strongest tool we have to track stolen vehicles and identify the criminals involved in this global trade."
Stolen cars smuggled to Africa
Law enforcement agencies in 12 participating countries conducted a two-week operation, setting up an average of 46 checkpoints daily to inspect 12,600 vehicles against INTERPOL's Stolen Motor Vehicle database.
The operation uncovered several stolen vehicles, predominantly Toyota, Peugeot, and Honda models, trafficked via land and sea routes.
In one notable incident, Nigerian Customs Service officers discovered six stolen vehicles – Toyota and Lexus models – in freight containers from Canada.
INTERPOL's database confirmed these vehicles were reported stolen in Canada in 2024, prompting ongoing investigations between Nigeria and Canada.
The operation, dubbed "Safe Wheels," was supported by INTERPOL's SMV Task Force and funded by the Government of Canada under the "Project Drive Out" partnership, aimed at combating vehicle theft and illicit spare part trade.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Interpol Arrests 20 Over Network That Distributed Child Sex Abuse Material
Twenty people in Europe, the United States and South America have been arrested as part of an investigation into an international network that produced and distributed child sexual abuse material, Interpol said on Friday. The policing organization said the network was also thought to extend to Asia and the Pacific region. The arrests, which took place in 12 countries, were the result of a cross-border inquiry in which investigators tracked the illegal material online to people who viewed or downloaded it, according to Interpol. The sweep made public by Interpol on Friday included arrests in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, Italy, Paraguay, Portugal, Spain and the United States. It also led investigators to 68 other suspects in 28 countries, including the Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania, according to Interpol and the Spanish police. The investigation began last year in Spain, where officers from the national police force's specialized cyberpatrols came across suspicious instant messaging groups, the Spanish police said in a statement on Friday. The police said the online groups had been set up exclusively to distribute images of child sexual exploitation. As the authorities in Spain became aware that the network behind the online messaging forums was international, they began to work with the Interpol, where investigators broadened the operation to South America, Interpol said. In the arrests announced on Friday, the police in Spain said they had detained seven people in five provinces, and seized cellphones, computers and storage devices. Investigators found that in some cases, those suspected of viewing or downloading the illegal images worked with children. In Seville in southern Spain, the police arrested a schoolteacher whom they accused of being in possession of exploitative images and belonging to several chat groups through which the illegal material was distributed. In Barcelona Province, the police arrested a health worker who treated children; the police said that he was suspected of paying minors in Eastern Europe for sexually explicit images. The police said that one man who was arrested in the town of El Masnou in Barcelona Province had downloaded a messaging app to watch the illegal material and later deleted the app to hide his activities from his family. In Latin America, officers arrested a teacher in Panama and 12 other people in countries across the region, Interpol said.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Interpol issues red notice for Ghana's fugitive ex-minister
Ghana's former finance minister Ken Ofori-Atta has been placed on Interpol's Red Notice list for allegedly using public office for personal gain. This comes after Ghanaian prosecutors declared him a wanted person as well as a fugitive from justice, as he was outside the country, over his alleged involvement in several corruption cases when he was in government. A Red Notice is not an arrest warrant but a request to police worldwide to detain someone pending extradition. Ofori-Atta, who is said to be out of the country for medical reasons, has not commented on the allegations, but he has said he has been unlawfully treated. The 65-year-old has been accused of causing financial losses to the state. The allegations include questions over procurement procedures in the building of a controversial national cathedral, which remains a hole in the ground despite the alleged spending of $58m (£46.6m) of government money. Ofori-Atta's lawyers had offered to represent him but the state prosecutor said they could not respond to criminal charges on behalf of their client. Reporter who sued MP and won $18m hopeful he will pocket the money In February, Ofori-Atta appealed to the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) to remove his name from the wanted list and provided a definite return date in May. State prosecutor Kissi Agyabeng accepted Ofori-Atta's assurance and subsequently took his name off the wanted list. But in March Ofori-Atta filed a lawsuit, claiming unlawful treatment and requesting removal of related content from the OSP's social media platforms. Early this month, Ofori-Atta was re-declared a wanted person and a fugitive from justice after failing to appear before an investigative panel. Agyebeng subsequently formally initiated the Red Notice request, seeking international help in tracking down the former official, local media reported. "We want him here physically, and we insist on it. A suspect in a criminal investigation does not pick and choose how the investigative body conducts its investigations," Agyebeng said. In the Red Notice released on late Thursday, Interpol said Ofori-Atta is wanted on charges of "using public office for profit". He was finance minister from January 2017 to February 2024, when the New Patriotic Party (NPP) was in power. The NPP lost last December's elections to the National Democratic Congress. President John Mahama, who was inaugurated in January, went on to establish an investigative committee known as Operation Recover All Loot. The committee has received over 200 complaints of corruption, amounting to more than $20bn in recoverable funds. Mahama has directed the attorney general and minister of justice to launch investigations into these allegations, stating that Ghana will no longer be a safe haven for corruption. However, some Ghanaians have criticised him for discontinuing cases against his former allies on trial. Can Ghana's new president meet the voters' high expectations? The Maths Queen with a quantum mission to mentor girls Why some Ghanaians are fighting in insurgency-hit Burkina Faso Ghana wants more for its cashews, but it's a tough nut to crack Go to for more news from the African continent. Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica Focus on Africa This Is Africa
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Three men to go on trial next year over fires linked to UK PM Starmer
LONDON (Reuters) -Three men all linked to Ukraine will go on trial next April accused of involvement in a series of arson attacks on houses and a vehicle in London connected to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, a London court heard on Friday. Over five days last month, police were called to fires at a house in north London owned by Starmer, another at a property nearby where he used to live, and to a blaze involving a car that also used to belong to the British leader. Ukrainian Roman Lavrynovych, 21, is charged with three counts of arson with intent to endanger life. Fellow Ukrainian Petro Pochynok, 34, and Romanian national Stanislav Carpiuc, 26, who was born in Ukraine, are accused of conspiracy to commit arson. Lavrynovych and Carpiuc appeared by video-link at London's Old Bailey court on Friday where Judge Bobbie Cheema-Grubb set the trial for April 27 next year. Pochynok was not present for the hearing. In earlier hearings, prosecutors said the motive for the arsons was unclear. The men will enter formal pleas at a hearing in October, but the lawyers for Carpiuc and Pochynok said their clients denied involvement. Counter-terrorism police have led the investigation but none of the men have been charged with offences under terrorism laws or the new National Security Act, which was brought in to target hostile state activity. Police said the first fire involved a Toyota RAV4 car that Starmer used to own and sold to a neighbour. Days later, there was a blaze at a property where Starmer previously resided and the following day there was an attack on a house in north London that he still owns. Starmer, who has lived at his official 10 Downing Street residence in central London since becoming prime minister last July, has called the incidents "an attack on all of us, on our democracy and the values we stand for". Earlier this week a fourth man, aged 48, who had been arrested at London Stansted Airport in connection with the arson, was released on police bail.