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Showing posts with label Peru. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peru. Show all posts

Monday, 15 December 2008

Seized 3 tons of cocaine mixed into a shipment of guano bound for Spain.

Police in Peru say they have seized 3 tons of cocaine mixed into a shipment of guano bound for Spain.A four-month investigation led to the seizure at a warehouse in the capital of Lima, anti-drug police Col. Cesar Cortijo said Monday.Cortijo said the drugs belonged to a trafficking ring that smuggled cocaine out of the country mixed with other products. Four Peruvians and a Colombian were arrested.Police delayed announcing the Dec. 4 raid because it was initially impossible to calculate how much cocaine was mixed with the guano, the nitrogen- and phosphate-rich droppings of birds and bats.Cortijo said the cocaine was destined for Barcelona, Spain.Peru is the world's largest producer of coca and cocaine after Colombia, and it is also a major source of guano, harvested from excrement-stained islands off its southern coast. Most is used as fertilizer in Peru's fields, but some is shipped overseas, where it is a favorite among organic gardeners.

Tuesday, 6 May 2008

Punitha K K Samy''I don't know exactly what happened but I believe she could have been duped by her Nigerian lover into carrying the drugs for him,''

Punitha K K Samy, 50, who was last heard of in August 2006, is apparently yet another case of women travelling alone being used as drug carriers by international syndicates that operate in several countries including India, say Malaysian authorities.Her case could boost the government's controversial plan to make a law that would require a woman taking a flight alone to get permission from her family members.The Peruvian prison authorities have contacted Kalai Kumar, a friend and former employer in Ampang here, to inform that she was very ill.
''Punitha gave the prison authorities my contact number. They told me she is suffering from stomach cancer and tuberculosis,'' Kumar told the New Straits Times on Sunday. ''The caller told me they could not contact Punitha's family and that she gave them my name,'' Kumar, who also goes by the spiritual name of Tarapith Yantra Yogi and is the founder of the Tantra Yoga Hindu Organisation, said.
He said Punitha lost contact with her family nine years ago. With nowhere to go, she sought help at his organisation in Pinggiran Batu Caves in Selangor state.
''She stayed and worked with us. She was a social worker who was active in charity work.'' According to Kumar, Punitha left for Dublin, Ireland, in 2005 where she worked as a maid for about a year.
''She returned to Malaysia and worked with me for several months before she packed her bags and said she was going to find a job in Europe. The last I spoke to her was in August 2006 when she called me from Spain to say she had met and fallen in love with a Nigerian and that they were going to get married.''
Then came the call from the Peruvian prison which shocked Kumar.
''I don't know exactly what happened but I believe she could have been duped by her Nigerian lover into carrying the drugs for him,'' he said, urging Punitha's family to contact her.Kumar's mission now is to bring her back, and he is seeking the assistance of the authorities here as well as NGOs.The government move to monitor ''fly-alone-women'', announced Saturday last, has been panned by women's organisations and NGOs as violation of law and of basic human rights.
The government says it is only trying to fight a growing menace. Ninety percent of the 119 Malaysians caught trafficking in drugs last years were women.
The vast majority of these women is aged between 21 and 27 and is believed to have been duped or forced into being ''mules'' for drug syndicates.
It is learnt that Malaysians were prime targets for these syndicates wanting to smuggle drugs into European Union countries, as they do not require visas for stays of up to 90 days or to transit in those countries.

Monday, 31 March 2008

Cocaine, found hidden in king-size mattresses, was destined for Europe

Police seized 2 metric tons (2.2 tons) of cocaine and arrested four alleged members of an international drug-trafficking gang, Peruvian officials said Sunday.
In two coordinated raids, police confiscated 1.5 metric tons (1.7 tons) of cocaine from a house in a Lima suburb and the rest from a building in the neighboring port of Callao late Saturday, said Col. Demetrio Perez Vargas, chief of information for Peru's national police.
A Venezuelan and three Peruvians were arrested, police said in a statement. The cocaine, found hidden in king-size mattresses, was apparently destined for Europe.
Interior Minister Luis Alva Castro told reporters the drugs came from the coca-producing Apurimac River Valley southeast of Lima, where last week Shining Path rebels working with drug traffickers killed a police officer and wounded 11 others in an ambush.Peruvian authorities have confiscated nearly 10 metric tons (11 tons) of drugs in the first three months of 2008, according to the national police. The Andean country is the world's second-largest coca and cocaine producer after Colombia.On Saturday, the Interior Ministry announced the seizure of some 66 pounds (30 kilograms) of cocaine at Jorge Chavez International Airport in Callao wrapped in dirty blankets and allegedly bound for Spain. Two employees of Swissport International Ltd. and two airport employees were arrested.In early March, police also seized 1.5 metric tons (1.7 tons) of cocaine and detained seven Peruvians and four Ecuadoreans on a beach in northern Peru.

"They say it's easy, you can make good money."The pledged remuneration may vary, but 5,000 euros (about $7,885) per kilo of cocaine is typical

traffickers are always seeking new ways to move their prized product.Many departing Peru on commercial flights are young Western tourists heading back to Europe, where cocaine brings a premium. An underground network recruits them -- in European cafes, on college campuses, in clubs and even in coded newspaper adds."They might approach you in a bar at night, or at the university," said Elena Santos, 24, of Madrid, among the large contingent of jailed Spanish burriers. "They say it's easy, you can make good money."The pledged remuneration may vary, but 5,000 euros (about $7,885) per kilo of cocaine is typical.Traffickers help burriers conceal drugs stashed in checked luggage, taped to torsos, inserted into body cavities, swallowed in latex balls -- a potentially fatal technique, should a capsule rupture. Most burriers are Latin American. But a significant number are Europeans and some Americans, all supposedly inconspicuous because of their looks and passports.But Peruvian authorities are onto them.
Using sniffer dogs and sundry detection techniques, police arrest hundreds of burriers each year at Lima's Jorge Chavez International Airport. Four tons of cocaine were seized in 2007. Some travelers' nerves give them away; sometimes it's their odd travel itineraries -- a week in Peru without visiting the Inca capital of Cuzco.Many crossed naively from comfortable existences into a menacing realm with no escape
Santos, an animated chain-smoker with pierced lips, appearing every bit a hip young Spaniard, said she got scared once in South America and wanted out. But, she said, the traffickers threatened her loved ones."They told me they know where my family lives," said Santos, who has a 4-year-old son in Madrid. "They're capable of killing my son. What could I do?
The scheme was her boyfriend's brainstorm, says Santos, daughter of a successful businessman in the Spanish capital.
Three days before she was busted, she said, her boyfriend traveled alone back to Spain with a kilo of coke swallowed in 89 capsules. She wasn't so lucky, she added.
Santos says she agreed to insert 13 capsules with slightly more than a pound of cocaine into body cavities. She says she wouldn't swallow them, terrified of the case of a friend who died when a swallowed capsule broke. She was busted within 10 minutes of arriving at the airport on Oct. 26, 2006, she said.
Like others, she believes she was set up -- "sold" by traffickers to corrupt cops so burriers with larger loads could pass.
The women's jail here is severely overcrowded (hundreds sleep in hallways), and, according to the European burriers, serves execrable food and offers inadequate medical care. A South African burrier with AIDS died this year, they say.
But in general, foreign women said, no one bothers them. They take part in sewing and other workshops and have a lot of free time to ponder their missteps. They make friends. The Spanish and Dutch embassies, representing about 50 prisoners, provide books.
"I can't tell someone not to do what I did, but they must first think of the consequences," said Scheerstra, speaking softly, with resignation. "The consequences are for the rest of one's life. It's not worth it."
Santos pines for her family and misses the hubbub of urban life and her freedom.
"The easy money is an illusion," Santos said. "Better to work hard and have fewer luxuries and never get thrown into a place like this.
"Liberty," she concluded, "has no price."
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