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The Office of National Security (ONS) has categorically debunked a tabloid report implicating the National Security Coordinator, Abdulai Caulker, in a massive drug and cash concealment scandal.

Describing the report as completely baseless and a malicious figment of the writerโ€™s imagination, top ONS officials confirmed that legal departments are already preparing to initiate litigation proceedings against the publishers.

The controversy erupted after a local tabloid published an โ€œinvestigationโ€ claiming that the ONS Boss interfered in a high-profile police operation. The article alleged that police had detained four foreign nationals, confiscated a substantial quantity of cocaine, and uncovered six suitcases filled with cash. It went on to claim that Caulker personally directed the release of the suspects, sending Presidential Guards and ONS officials to seize the narcotics and cash.

Reacting swiftly, the ONS stated that no such narcotics operation, suspect detention, or cash confiscation ever occurred within the jurisdiction. The security apparatus clarified that the entire storyline was manufactured to intentionally target the hard-earned reputation of the National Security Coordinator.

Media experts note that the publication represents a severe violation of the Independent Media Commission (IMC) Media Code of Practice. According to Section 1 of the IMC Code, newspapers are strictly mandated to verify the accuracy of their facts before printing. By inventing a complex narcotics operation without police records, physical evidence, or institutional verification, the tabloid completely bypassed basic journalistic ethics.

Furthermore, the publication directly ignored the IMCโ€™s strict โ€œRight to Replyโ€ guideline. The tabloid failed to contact the ONS communications unit to give Abdulai Caulker an opportunity to respond to the allegations before going to print. Under IMC regulations, when a media house publishes unverified or defamatory information, it is legally obligated to issue an unconditional apology and retraction with equal prominence to the original story. Continued non-compliance exposes the tabloid to heavy financial penalties, suspension, or the permanent revocation of its operating license by the Commission.

Sources close to Tower Hill emphasize that the narrative directly contradicts Caulkerโ€™s established policy framework. Throughout his tenure, Caulker has maintained an uncompromising intolerance toward narcotics trafficking, substance abuse, and organized crime, working closely alongside the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

โ€œThis is not investigative journalism,โ€ an ONS communications representative stated off the record. โ€œThis is a coordinated effort to undermine the institutional credibility of Sierra Leoneโ€™s security architecture at a time when we are actively tightening regional border safetyโ€.

The Office of National Security has signalled that it will not take this assault lying down. A formal refutation is only the first step. For the sake of media sanity

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