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FOR OH M ICIAI, l iSE ONLY
J~RS L/ 10243
S January 1982
Woridvvide Re ort
p
NARCOTICS AND DANGEROUS ~RUGS
CFOUO 1 /82)
Fg~$ FOREIGN BRf~ADCAST INFO~MATION SERVI~C~
FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
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Fcll2 l1F'}~'1("t:~l l'~E' (1`1 t~
. :i1~k5 L/11J~~3
8 January 2982
= WORLDWIDE REPORT
NARCOTICS AND DANGEROUS DRUGS
(FOUO 1/82)
_ CONTENTS
ASIA
AUSTRALIA
. Cocaine Use Boost?ing, Transshipments From U.S. 'Possible'
- (Simon Bohrsmani~; THE inTEEKEND AUSTRAI,IAN MAGAZINE,
24-25 Oct 81) 1
Police Say Pure Cocaine Flooding Eastern States '
- (David Hirst; THE WEEKEND AUSTRALIAN, 17-18 Oct 81)......... 3
Queensland Policemen Charged Witli Growing Marijuana
(Joe Begley; THE AUSTRALIAN, 19 Oct 81) .................a... 4
Briefs
Access to Mail, Tax Recocds 5
Drug 'Factory' S
Police on Cannabis Charge 5
.r
INDIA `
MP's Demand Stern Measures Against Drugs Menace
(PATRIOT, 4 Dec 81) 6
INDONESIA
Foreign Nationals Arrestea
(5INAR HARAPAN, 30 Oct 81) 7
Narcotics Interdiction Course, Arrests
(SINAR HARAPAN, 24 Oct 81) 9
_ a - [III - WW - 138 FOUO]
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PAKISTAN
Thriving Narcotics Smuggling Racket Reported
(MORNING NE"vVS, 11 Dec 81) 11
Drug Users Profiled; Incidence Among Students Reported
(Zeenat ~iisam; DAWN, 11 Dec 81) 1~
Briefs
Charas, Opium Seized 14
Customs Continue Searching Ship 14
LATIN AMERICA
MEXICO
Drugs From Germany Seized, Traffickers Captured
(EL FRONT~RIZO, 2 Dec 81)....... . 15
- officials Witness Incineration of Seized Marihuana
(EL BRAVO, 15 Oct 81) 16
Brie�s
Drugs Smuggled for Pharmaceuticals 17
Jail Drug Dealers Sentenced 17
November Antidrug Campaign Results ~7
PERU ~
Drug Traffickers, Methods, Rehabilitation Program
(LA NACION, 9 Nov 81; EL COMERCIO, various dates)........... 19
Drug Traffickers Execution
Drugs Transported in Refrigerator Truck
Dr~iq Rehabilitation Program Costs
Tra.'.icking Methods Uncovered
NEAR EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
IRAN
Briefs
Drug Arrests 23
Hashish Haul 23
Shiraz Drug Arrest 23
Drugs Discovered 23
Shiraz Drug Seizure 24
Mashhad Drug Discoveries 24
Raids in Zahedan, Tehran 24
-b-
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,~~�t�i: i~~ :~::r: .>rti,~
Urug TcafFickers Arre~tPd 24
Afghan Drug Smuggling 24
Opium Confiscated 24
Opium Haul in Khorasan
IINITED ARAB EMIRATES
Briefs
Omani Soldier Arrested 26
SUB-SAHP:2AN AFRICA
SOUTH AFRICA
Police Break Up Cocaine Smuggling Ring
(Sandra Lieberum; THE CITIZEN, 15 Dec 81) 27
WEST EUROPE � ,
' AUSTRIA
Briefs
i Hashish in Vorarlberg 29
Narcotics Squad 29
FRANCE
Briefs
Heroin Seizure 30
Heroin Traffickers Arrested 3~'
GREECE
Briefs
Drug Tr.affickers Arrested 31
FRG rxtradition Request 31
ITALY
Briefs
Heroin Seizure 32
NETHERLANDS
Briefs
tlashish on Lebanese Freighter 33
UNITED KINGDOM
IIriefs
Murder of Principal Witness 3~
- c -
F(1R C1FFT( TAT, TT~F (1NT~Y
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AUSTRALiA
COCAIDiE USE BOOMING, TRANSSHIPMENTS FROM U.S. 'POSSIBLE' ~
Canberra THE WEEKEND AUSiRALIAN :~IAGAZINE in English 24-25 ~ct 81 p 5
[Article by Simon Bohrsmann: "The Jet Sr~ Fix in Australia"]
- [ExCerpt] As a result: a small. The arri~~al of cocaine
OCaINE lIl but i8pidly ST'!"'=L'~B CO- on ctie easc coast oc ~us-
- ~u5tralia csune set blossomed su 1i e~t a slowly es~cand-
used to be a the east~ rn suburbs a,nd 5B ~ P
northern beaches region ing demand; it landPa in
song by ~.J. Cale oi'Sydney, and quickly bulk with ever,.�thinq
embraced their lower ui- ready to go but an ad-
~n pub j ukeboYes. ~~e neighbors. ~~enising campaign.
the Rolls Royce ot vts~cu~g T~p stars dis- In Sydney, in che last
~'_'~1 S that made coverec~ they could now 14 months. police have
g send their chaufferEd li- seized ~caches worth ,
overseas pop stars mousines to pick up arounrl s5 million. Vnder
Slllff and dribble their favorite "snow', the "Lhey only.find 10
even i! they had to pay per cent" rule. that could
during intE~views, up to three times the mean f50 million worth
pnce back home: a is already flooding into
'~'1@ magie WYlltB glamorous American Sydney each year.
powder that Woody � Silm actress at a high so- John X is typical of'the �
~iety party in Sydney new� crop of Australian
Allen sneezed into had to be chiPPed about cocaine buyers. He Lakes
� t~ll21 alT - bUt, the c:umps of white home about 5400 a week
powder clinging to her. from his job in the tet-
othen~ise, lt W 1S nostrils; and claims were evision industry. and he
unseen, snade that in just a few often spends between
months, organised cnme ~0 and 5100 oi this on
In the last 50 years, ~angs had set up a recreational drugs, in his �
the jetset fix disap- highlyprofitablecocaine case cocaine and mari-
peared up the nasal operation in Australia juana. He says: "I vlsited
passages of only very and were open for busi- the United States about
iew of Australia'S� ness before the law four�years ago, it was
~ "dope cogAOSCenti". could say "snort". easy to buy coke. When I
Cozaine, the so-called came home I forgot
Then, about 18 months sex and confidence . about it until six months
ago, a mosc remarkable , powder which has be- ago the guy I buy grasS
thinghappened. come the drug of choice from had coke too. I had
. PIastie bags of cocaine. of middle Amenca, had the cash, so I bougt~t
refined in South Am~ri- ~~ed, some. I only snort it if
- can jungle laboratories, Cocaine now sells in I~m going out to a party
suddenly appeared in si- Sydney for 5200-SZ20 a or a club:' ,
zeable amounts on the ~m, A dealer will pay Last 12arch. the Secre-
scates of Australian ille- up to s42200 for aa oun.^.e. tary-General of the
- gal druq dealers, who With 28 grams in an gangkok Narcotics Con-
were delighted to find ounce, the dealer caa trol Soard. Major Gen-
they had a ready market ~ke;1400 profit before e~.y~ pow Saz~sin~
- of affluent middie~lass ~~~cutttng" the dzug with ~aimed the Iarge Aus-
citizens, prepared co ~ythin~r from lactose to tralian syndicates were ~
fork out double che Price ~ushed vitamirb pills to using established heroin
their "coke" snorting risky amphetamines smuggling routes
~ counterparts iii the Un- ~xed with synthetic lig- through South-East
ited States would PaY� ' noca?ne. Asia to shift cocaine.
1
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Then. in Apnl. the been untangled by
1~finister for administra- police.
ti~�e Senzces, Mr :Je~v- Nor does the Fetlerai
man. announced steps to Government's deploy-
councer an"espected" ment of an officer or t~vo
boom in the cocaine in the sun-drenched Pa-
traffic into Australia. A cific seem li~ely to block
Federal Police officer the import of cocaine.
would make regular vi- Being the obvious route.
sits to the Pacific region it would be more thar.
and South America. he likely avoided by the
~d. It is not difficult to drug syndicaces who
- see why the Pacific Is- ' would. instead, ~se more
land nations - lytng be- Naborate routes via
tween us and the co- North America or Euro-
caine laboratories of pe, .
America - would come But the effective levei
under surveillance.
Some senior police of support Australian
favor the small en- , forces could espect from
trepreneur theory, a�sce- ~ agencies like the U8
- nario where drugs are Drug Eniorcement
~muggled into the coun- ' Agency - already swam-
rry by individuals after a p~d with America's co-
~ fas;, buck rather than an caine epidemic - is
or~;anised crune syndi- doubtful. ,
c,ace. The higher prices paid
This theory was ap- for the drug here could
_ plied to heroin smug- make it profitable for
gling by the NSW Reya1 Australian criminals
Drugs Cammisswn in its with US connections to
eariydaYs.butnowioo3cs~ siphon supplies of co-
terribly limp ia tlie Walce caine just landed in
of the Mr Asia trial and America for redirectton
other IarBe scale drug ,toAustralia.
rackets. which havE
CSO: 5300/7517
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. ~USTRALIA
POLICE ~AY PURE COCAINE FLOODING EASTERN STATES
Canberra THE WEEKEND AUSTRALIAN in English 17-18 Oct 81 p 1
[Article by David Hirst]
f~I:~GLLaR lentiful anci ~he druR lmong uealthier'
[TeXt] ~ p 1~eoE~le. Last IIlOI1tI1 ;~olice
pure st~pplies of the trendy sclzed S2 nu~iion worth in [he
"snob drug" - COCdIri@ - are elite suburb of Darlinu Poiiic.
l~ein~ ~mu led into ~1us- and in ~uqust last y~ear sa.s
~P million ~~�ortti uas found h~d-
_ tr~li3 and fetching more den in crates of imported
Llla~l $'100 a gram irom Boli~�ian curios.
wealthy users. :~Iost of Austratia's c:ocaine
suppty is understood to come
:11tl~ou~h cocaine is low on from Bolivia, and the trade
the lisc of police drug priori- liere is chought to be con-
L~es, in the past 14 months in trolled by groups of Bolivian
S~dney alone SS million ~corth emiqres operating outside es-
has been seized. tablished crime syn3icates.
Officials estima~e another "Snow". ~~coke" - or. as it is
545 million worttt has gone on sometimes called in Australia.
to the Sydney markec and ic~ "Tlie Sentimental Bloke" -
Nielbourne, ~ehere tlie trade has been che fashionable druq~
has only recently begun to ?or wealtliy Americans for
ilourisli, about S10 miilion some S�ears, but was re:atively
t~~orth lias been sold in the l~ard ~o buv here.
pasz fe~~~ months. Ic is still abouc tw~ice as ex-
Victorian and Federal Police ~~ensi~~e as in America, where
acknow~led~e the new popular- . the trade is now wortl~ about
it~� oC cocaine. bu6 said y'ester- 530,000 ~niUion a~�ear, and
day the?r ~ctempts to clamp where about 40 to 48 tonnes of
dow�n w~cre being irus~rated by tlie drug are illegally imported'
tradicional police i~iesperience annually.
in dealing with tlie ~cealth~�, A senior Federal Police of-
people naw using tlie drut~. ficer said tlie Commonw~ealtli�
Drug auttiorities said co- druq unit also had no capacity
caine w~as fast ocertakinq mar- to deal ~~icli cocaine trafficl:-
ijuana as the trendy drug of ing unless e~~idence of it came
dinner parties, tvith a"snort" tu the unit's direct attentioa, .
- in ~�ogue instead of a port. ^It is not addicti~~e in the
Superintendant Graham sense ~}iac heroin is ac:d is
Hindson of the Victorian Dru~ contined [o the middle-upper
Squad said: "We liaveri t had class of socie~~~," he said.
any major arrests or seizures ~'1 am not in a position to es-
for the sunple reason that the tablish tlie e~tent of use. ~Ve
scene is not within the ambit ~ould 1~1~�e to restructure our
of H�here we ha~e been open~- force and qo into diiferent
ing. I~'s the swin~; set - the areas. That would mean turn-
champaqne types." ing our back~ on heroit~, 3I1C1
In ~ i~�tnria last y~car tlicrr. �~e are beinR comple~ei}� inun-
n�cr~ 4SJ4 reporcPd dturt oft~ dated witl~ liEroui."
cnces Of t4I1lCI1 Ullly l l were tor Cocaine ts normally inl~aled
~�ocauie. The prev~ous }~car through the nose and ~ake~~ in
tlu~re were ~ust Lhree cocaine this ~~�a~~ ~s considered rela-
arrescs. ticely harmless. Buc tl~e death
In S~~dne}�. police aiso ac- of a~~oung inan in ~Ielbour~ie
kno~~�ledge ~ncreased use qf :�'o n�eeks ago a�as a[tributed
to au incracenous �hit".
CSO: 5300/7517 s
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AUSTRALIA
QUEENSLAND POLICEMEN CHARGED WITH GROWING MARIJUANA
Canberra THE AUSTRALIAN in English 19 Oct 81 p 3
[Article by Joe Begley]
[ Text ] TWO QueetLSland po~ACe- ~a'~PPeared in court in Towns-
men have been charged with ville in March.
_ Coris iPJI t0 CultiV2te hUfld- Meanwhile, a State Labor
P g MP. Mr Kevin Hooper, sald
reds of thousand~ of mari- yesterday he would give the
juana plants in forest near Minister for PoUce, Mr xtnze,
Townsville. thr name of a detective who is
receivin g i400 a week in pro-
The charge follows a secret tection money from the pro-
six-mon~h inves~igation hy de- P~?etor of an illegal casino in a
tectives of the Internal In- nortli Queensland coastal
vestigations Bureau. The two town.
charged constables have been Last week Mr Hinze rejected
suspended from duty. Mr Hooper's claims that illegal
The Queensland Deputy casinoa were operating in
Police Commissioner, Mr Les Brisbana, and that they for-
Duify, confirmed that two med part oi a. drugs, prostitu-
police had been charged. tion and qambling racket: ,
They have been accused of Mr Hooper said yestetday:
conspiring to cultivate mari- "Now that Mr Hinze has been
juana from March 1980 to Feb- glven conclusive proof of the
ruary thts year. One has also e~cistence of these casinos, it is
been charged with conspiring his duty to find out which
Lo obstruct the cc.urse of Jus- p~lice officers are on Lhe Lake.
cice by oftering anc~ther police Even the most naive person
officer substantial suins of would realise these btg-money
money to ignoce a i~.rge drug B~bling houses would no~ be
plantation near Townsville. able to operate without pollce
They hace been summonsed protection."
CSO: 5300/7517
' 4
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' AUSTRALIA
BRIEFS
ACCESS TO MAIL, TAX RECORDS--Canberra--The Federal Government is to consider a
drug inquiry recommendation that Federal Police be given access to taxation
records and power to intercept mail, the Minister for Administrative Services,
Mr Newman, said yesterday. Mr Newman told Parl.iament in Question Time that the
Government's consideration would centre on the need to achieve a balance between
ttie protection of tlie public from drug traffickers and the protection of the
~ rights of individuals. Ttie recommendation was among those handed down by the
_ Royal Commission into drugs, headed by Mr~Justice Williams. Mr Newman said
Mr Justice Williams had stipulated that such measures shc+uld be introduced under
strict coi:trols, which should be no less than those which now operate in respect
of the power of the police to a.ntercept ph.one calls. If introduced, the measure
- would probably require police to apply to court for permission to gain access to
tax records. [Text] [Sydney THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD in English 23 Oct 81 p 2]
llRUG 'FACTORY'--Meibourne--The City Court was told here yesterday that a police
raid on a suburban factory uncovered a professional drug operation "unlike that
experienced by the drugs Uureau in the past." Alan Frederick Neilsen (63),
builder, of Doncaster, and Roderick John Smith (35), foreman, of Fairfield, were
ch~irged with conspiring to manufacture amphetamines, possessing amphetamines
and selling and trafficking in tlie drugs. No pleas w�ere taken. Deg.-Sgt R.
Schrimer, of the CIB drug squad told Magistrate K. Burgess that the police
seized 2.7 kilos of amphetamines valued at $90,000 in the raid on the Campbell-
field factory on 'Puesday. He alleges that in a sealed section of the factory
tl~e police had Found enough chemicals to pr~duce 984 kilos of the drug. Mr
Burges~ SeC bail of $20,000 for Neilsen and $10,000 for Smith. They were remanded
to appear in ttle :~Zme court today. [Text] [Perth THE WEST AUSTRALIAN in English
22 Oct 81 p 40]
PULI.CE ON CANNABIS CHAKCI:--The first prosecution witness in a drug trial involv-
ing four detectives said yesterday that tie was offered $100,000 for three months'
work hy a woman who was growing cannabis at Jarrahdale. The witness, Meho Covic,
unemployed, of Tuart Hill, was giving evidence in the District Court against four
. men and a woman who are charged with having conspired between January 1 and
,lanuary 22 to obtairi cannabis ~~ith intent to sel.l or supply. The accused are
I)et-Sgt herry Tangney (36), of in~illiton Road, Karrinyup, Det-Sgt Laurence Butler
(31), of Wanneroo Road, Wanneroo, Detective Robert Stephenson (32) of Blackall
llrive, (~reenwood, an3 Detective Dean Lewitzka (34), of Elliott Street Scarborough.
'lhe woman is Aloma La Donna P~1}iam (31), domestic, of Stirling Street, Highgate.
'1'he detectives face furtl~er charges that they conspired together and with others
to pervert the course of. justice in the prosecution of four men charged with being
in possession of cannabis, and that they conspired together to supply cannabis to
Uonna Pe].ham. The accused deny all the charges. [Excerpt] [Perth THE WEST
AUSTRI~LtAN in English 23 Oct 81 p 1]
- CSO: 53U0/7517 5
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z~~
- T1P'S DEMAND STERN i~ASURES AGAINST DRUGS MENACE
New Delhi PATRIOT in F*~glish 4 Dec 81 p 5
(Text] 'I1; 'uvY members. in the . Lok' and had reported detecting 36 ccmbat the tra~cking. ,The
1~'~~ Sabha on T~ursday de- cases oi trafficki,ng in narcocic Health ~J~.'inlstry at the Centra
- manded stcrn measures to tackle drugs, had already formed a committce
tne ;rowing menace of illicit Not satisAed with the reply, tne, of eep^rts. ~
trzEfic ia narcatics in the coun- g~p mem6er protested that a Would the Goverament launch
_ try. matter a8ecting hundreds ot `an anti-drug crusade' in view~ of
Replying to a volley of ques� Youth ia educational institutioa~s the honor stories and confet-,
tions dari.~g question vour ~1ia- tn Goa Banbay and DeJhi waL sions by those who ran the dens,
Ister oi State for Health ~ N R aought 'to be diamissed as a State Persis:ed Mr Parulekar.,
' Laskar said a new dog quad~ subjec~ He decaanded aa inquiry into
crack intelligence teaans in ~ p8~lekar was conceraed th awhole matter by a High Court
' major international airports-and ~lnce the report spoke of brilll. jud,e. ~We canno~ ieave it to
a special narcotic cell were some antl organieed network ~f agenos States, .lir Parulercar said.
of the mea:u:es that the Gov- Y, Congre~ss-I memher Shivkumar
laclud.ng men and women from Singh sai,d ia hie coitstituency-
- ernment had lritiated to corubat West Germany. France and Bri� gy~d~,3 (,ylp) - laroescale
the menace, taln-all wanted by the Inter~.+ol ~.~~~A~ ia ganja and charas
Members e~epresaed concea~a for crimes. was tak~n; place and even the
over the fact that India was y~ t,askar said again that the trains ~~vere s!opped by criminals
emergin; as a major conduit for ~aharasbtra Government had to smr,g;le drugs. As the State
~ smu;gling and hundreds of arreated certain peaple aad sei~ Gover~~meat had no contral over
Indian yo~rth were turning dru~ ed charas, ganja and morphine. thi~, he wanted the Cen!ra to ob.
nddicta. ~ Adding his own concem in the tain a detailed report oa the
The issue was raised by ~dr matter Speaker Balram Jakhar cnatter.
Bapusaheb Parulekar at qucstion directed that the Government 1~Ir Vasant Rumar Pandit eaid
time 'with reference to a oubllsh- should take serion~ nnte of dru8 there was little coordination bet-
ed report 'drugging of Bombay' n�atScking. ~ ween the concera~ed Mlnistries
on scnuggled illicit sale and use It was mainly a problem oi Qe- of Health,'Education aad Flaaace,
oi charas, ganja and other nar- veloDed countries, the Mlnlster for tackliag the menaee of in-
cotics on a mass scale. diagnosed, but with the spread cieasing illicit tra~cking in aar�
- Mr Laskar, replied that the oi education In,dian youth also cotic drugs.
matter fell within the purvtew S~dually took to this. Mr Lask~r aaid the Govera-
of tha Naharashcra Governmeat. And, ~r Laakar affirmed, the meet had alnady Initiated a
which was already seized of it ~vemmeat was taking action to number of stepa to curt~ll dru~�
smugallag. .
CSO: 5300/7014
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- INDONESIA
FOREIGN NATIONIILS ARRESTED ~
Jakarta SINAR HARAPAN in Indonesian 30 Oct S1 pp l, 12
[Text] 'Itao foreigners, a German named Gerd Hrusche [as published] and an Iranian
called Abdol Alisadeh, who were arrested in Moro District, Riau Archip~lago, are
dangerous persons, according to S. J. Matfiaus, chief of Tan~ung Ptnang Immigration
Office. ~
Based on investigation, there are ~ndications that both foreigners are involved in
the smuggling of narcotics, weapons, gold or in other suTiversive activities.
Mathaus said, who ad3ed tY?at it was difficult to extract information from the
suspects, particularly the German wfio is a taciturn type. Wheai arre~ted by the
police in '4oro, 6oth foreigners said tfiey had lost their passports. These pass-
ports have 6een found since. The first paper to be found was a piece of identi-
ficatian belonging to Alisadeh, by a 6-year-old boy on a pier o.r, 20 October.
The following day, three passports were f~und on a main street by a 9-year-old
- youngster. They belonged to Hrusche~ Alisadeh and a certain Heinz Friederich,
respectively. .
The deputy co~rcnanding police chief in Riau, MaJ Drs Sitompul, said investigation
is still goin g on as to why Alisadeh~s identification paper and the three passports
wer~ f.~und at two dif.ferent places and they were found by two youngsters a few
days a.fter the two foreigners were arrested on 18 October. Were these mere coin-
cidences or were there other factors involved?
Sitompul also wanted to know for sure where the two foreigners stayed in Moro.
- As to ttie ~assport bearing the name of Heinz Friederich, the pr~otograph of wH~m
bears a strong resemblance to Gerd Hrusche's, invest.igation is being made to find
out whether Heinz Iriederich is another assumed name of Hrusche. Meanwh ilp,
Friederich is nowhere to be found.
Pending a thorough investi~ation, Mathaus has a strong suspicion that Hrusche and
Friederich are one and the same person. Neither passport bore any visa stamp
for Indonesia, although. the pages o.� both passports are full of visa chops for
various trips to eastern Europe, particularly the one belonging to Gerd Hrusche.
Although his passport was issued in West Germany, one of the stamps showed a
prohibition to enter the United States when he tried to get an AmQrican visa from
a certain co untry in Europe.
_ 7
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�
Un tlic b~i5is, af. .i.nvrtitlt:,~ttoi~, l~~~lli f~~rc�:[gnrrs ~idm:ittccl ti~ey c:iitcre:~ l.n~onr~(;i I rc~m
Singapore by an outboard motc~�cboat. `1'hey landed at a beach in Moro three weeks
ago, at 5:30 am.
Who arranged their trip from Sir_ga~pore? Who are their contacts in Moro? What do
they carry--narcotics, gold or other goods? These are questions still to be
answered, as the suspects refuse to talk, Mathaus said.
According to this paper's observation, Maro region is a fishing village and it
serves as a clandestine lane for narcotics and human traffic. Although surrounded
by water, many inhabitants of Moro do not depend on fishing for their livelihood--
or live as farmers, either.
The waters of Moro meet with the southern channel of Malacca Strait through which
runs a heavy traffic of inerchentmen and oil tankers. Local fisheYman in Moro often
- see suspicious forei~n ships unloading commodities at night.
Mathaus confirmed such information. "We also hav~ similar reports. Our suspicion
is that those ships drop anchor and unload contraband on the Moro waters, and it is
possible that they are delivering narcotics." He added that people aboard
oil tankers are committing this tliing.
Lt Col Kamas Johar, the commanding police officer in Riau Archipelago, who is cur-
rently visiting ,7akarta on official duty, confirmed that Moro region is a trouble
spot, adding that the waters around Moro are on police record as a narcotics traf-
fic lane.
Due to shortage of personnel and equipment, the police are only able to conduct
limited patrols on an intermittex~t basis, he said.
9300
CSO: 5300/8311
,
_ 8
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- INDONESIA
NARCOTICS INTERDiCTION COURSE, ARR~STS
- Jakarta SINAR HARAPAN in ~ndonesian 24 Oct 81 pp l, 12
[Excerpts] Director General of Customs Wahono stated that Bali region has become
an operational center of an international narcotics syndicate to organize its
~.landestine business.
Wahono made this remark at Pertamina Cottage in Kuta, Bali last Friday night dur-
ing the closing ceremony of a special train~ng course on "Special Cargo and Nar-
cotics Interdiction" ~ointly sponsoxed by the Tndones~an and U.S. customs houses.
The course provides Indonesian customs personuel with training on how to identify
and track down narcotics.
Wahono attaches great importance to the course beaause,.he said, Indonesia has
indeed become a narcotics traff ic transit point for the ill.egal international
market. "Not long ago we confiscated 5 kg of heroin at Halim [Jakarta] Airport
in a plot to transport it to Amsterdam," he added.
" Philipps Gill, a member of the American Embassy in Indonesia, told this newspaper
that Indonesia is not only a narcotics ~raffic transit po~.nt, but also a consump~
tion region. "As a matter of fact, the largest consumption of illegal narcotics
takes place in Southeast Asia, and not in Western Europe or the U.S.," he said. �
_ Speaking before the training course on behalf of the U.S~ ambassador, Mr Gill
warned the people all. over ttie world to be alert against illicit narcotics trade,
because the current opium l~arvest at the "golden triangle" is the big~est in the
past 6 years.
- He estimaCed this yE;ar` s opium production from the "golden triangle" at about
500 tons. Consequently, the United States will continue to request the coll~abor-
ation of other countries in combatting international narcotics trade~ He ex-
plained that the special training course on narcotics interdiction just ended
does not serve the interests of the U.S. alone, but also for the entire humanity.
- llrs Samadi, chairman of the training execution cotmnittee, said that training of
this kind has proved beneficial to Indone5ian customs officers while carrying out
- their duties at harbors and airports, mer~ti.oning specifically in the courses in
theory and practice on~narcotics identifscution, baggage where narcotics are
hidden, aircraft and vessel inspection c.arrying narcotics, and the use af detec-
tive dogs.
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The training is divided into two par.ts, th~ first par.t held iu Juk~~rL~ aricl [I~~~
second in Bali. Each part lasts two weeks, attended by 30 participants, starting
last 28 September.
Ae previously reported, a 28-year-old American citizen named Anthony Ross Worf:h
using the false s elf--identity of Frank Joseph Smith, who was arrested in Ba1i on
_ 25 September, was deported to the U.S. Friday morning under escort of a U.S.
~ marshal. The suspect was described as a member of a dangerous syndicate and has
attempted several times to kill American members of the Tnterpol.. '
_ Anthony Ross Wor th was brought from Bali directly to Jakarta to be interrogated by
a special team of ~the Indoneszan Interpol. The examination was ~iandled irc person
- by the Chief of Police in his capacity as chairman of the Indonesian Interpol.
Before being deported to the U.S., Worth was also examined bj~ other law enforcement
_ authorities, namely, the Attorney General's Office and the Department of Justice.
The accused said that he could enter Tndonesia because he used an assumed name of
Frank Joseph Smi th. He arrived in Indonesia with his companion Miguel Trabela in
mid-September. Trabela, believed to be a leader in a Peruvian narcotics syndi-
cate, stayed only briefly in Indonesia before returning to his homeland. Anthony
Itoss Worth rema ined in Bali for a c~nsiderable time because he wanted to enjoy the
seascape of Kuta Beach, he said.
Meanwhile, two o ther. foreigners, Gerd (.Hrusche~, 38, and Abc~ol Alisadeh, 24, of
German and Iran ian nationali,ty, respectively, were arrested by the police at Moro
District, Riau Archipelago.
Arrested on 18 October, both fore~.gners told the police that they lost their
passports when they arrived from Singapore.
However, Gerd (Hrusche) said he had been living in Java for some time ar.d he even
has a wife and a chi.ld in Central Java.
According to Drs Kamas Johar, a police officer with the rank of lieutenant colonel
_ :~nd commanding officer in Riau Archipelago, both foreigners were on the wanted
~ list and blackl i sted against entry into Indonesia.
- Durin~; police investifiation, both for.eigners were insolent and uncooperative,
refusing to answer many questions. Kamas J~har said one or both of them were at
one time connec ted with the notorious Red Brigade in Germany.
He added tl~at i t is possible that both might be engaged in some subversive
activities in Indonesia.
9300
" CSO; 530Q/8311
10
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PAKISTAPI
THRIVING NAR,COTICS SMUGGLING RACKET REPORTED
:
Karachi MORNING NEWS in English 11 Dec S1 p 9
[ TeXt ) The uauaClin~ at contrabaad reqovered lrom ths sole.~ o! his
cargoes, .such as charas. haslwh shoea at ths Karachi sixyort
adn hesoin, abroad from heie ~vhile attemptin~ to smugQle it
haa become a thrivin~ racke.. out. '
~ven month crorei ot rupees In another case, Mr. Daneil, a
of the contraband cargces are Philippine national was .how-
1�eportediy bein~ ~mu~~led ever remanded to the jail~ cus-
abroad throueh difie~ent route.i ~ody aiter. 450 ~am9 ot heroin
by the gangs ~f the smugglers was recovered from his suit
iu a bid to make'a "faKt buck'. cases, before he boarded a PLa
Y.owever the local polic~, plane Yor FtanlrLurk
cuscoms department and uther ,l+lubashar ~11i was recnznded
~ law inforcemen6 agencies nave to Customs iollowing movery �
laid traps at all the usual o[ charas irom tha bottoa~ ot
- smugglin~ routef b thwart at� his siutcases at tho aisport.
tempt~ by osQani~ad ;anBs whc However, in aaother iacident
alleaedly have linlcs abroad, one Ghulam Abbas wa~ arraa
Y~terday four persons. in� ed by Directorate o! Iabetli�
~~o!ved ia smuYilina ef narco� tience urvesti~ation cell when
tics wer~ remamded to custody he was attemptin~ to amu~Yle
ol the investi~ation ce1L~ atter ~,U00 darhame o! UAE to Bom-
theq were produced betore . che bay by a flight oi PIA.
SDM ~alir. He wac also remaaded in ihe
Asaadullah Irani, . w~+ custody ot t~e Directorate o!
ed ~.er 1Z ~ o~ ~ri! w~ Intelligence !or iavestigation,
by the SDM Malir Yesterdaq.
CSO: 5300/4576 ~
!.1
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~
PAKISTAN
�DRUG USERS PROFILED; INCTDENCE AMONG STUDENTS REPORTED
Karachi DAWN in English 11 Dec 81 (Maqazine Section p 1)
- [Article by Zeenat F3isam: "Salma in Drug Land" ]
[Text J When Salma was br- wife and childr~. Salma had finiat?- of aa old htbitue eince div~ eddtc-
_ ought to hospital she was g~ool. Her parents ded- don i~ 4 snelai~e deepiy rooted with�~
unconscious. The dazk cir- ded co taave he~ with an uncle eo in che peraoa. ;t depicts a pachologi-
cle9 und0i hei eyes, dis� ~e could pursue college education ln cal ttend, ia tho peteoa4lity 9truc-
Pekistan. Her uncle was a doctor too. ture. Somehow, duria~ the cour~e of
heveUed hair and pale lips He had ao time to ~p4re evon devebpmeat, the peraon iwrtu with-
told a Story of a pathetic for h!s own ch~ldren. The auat~ ovac- diaw~l a~ a defence mechan~am to~
- illrtess. Sslma was a drug burdened wlth the respo~uibility of cope with aaxlety and becomee
addict. Unable to face the looking after a~ow(ag giri, wai p4aaive, withdrawn aad ind{t~'e:ent.
trials and tribulations of Comiag back from aollege Drugs fadlitatei thL pcefened~
Salma felt caged and lonely. She mode of deallng witb ~treut~l situ~
~ life, she had somehow taken swallowed the pW and ~lept ia the tioiu. A dinurbed parent~chiW rela-
refuge in the world of at'ternoon~, tioaship is coneidered to be the cw~e
drugs! Somehow ~he had gat ho3cl of of thL defective per~oaality traic.
a preacdption for mutdrax fram her Thero are three factors which
- The odyssey began twelve years S1?e uaed it for faur year~! enhaace the probability of a pn-
ago when Salma was a young girl of ~8 ~dictioa gtahu~ally sttipp~ motbid paruontlity ia the yAUng
18. She had a comfortable life. ~d her of her oour~ge to cxunter the who zeaort to drug iatake. Theie are:
Emodonally she was unoomfortable. of life. Whea her 1) svallaMHty of drugs 2) economic
Her father. a sucgeon, remained away Younger dtter got marrkd firat~ deprivation 3) campu~ u~ert..
from home duri~eg moet of her child- ~utad ot haz, S~na wa~ wsacJced AvailabWty, of druga ia crucW,
~ hood in peruael of spedalieation and ~?e~v11Y. Har dd1Y do~e of mandrax though eoonomic depriwtion is the
ia ~earch of bettes ptoepects. She lapt ~pwttd� . nuin cau~ad?e factor o[ a large
adomd the ab~entee father while her Het Paeab thought a settled segment of drug sddicte. Heaa drug
nlationehip: with her mother wu life mlght btfag s chanQe ia her. addicdon i~ uat~lly fouad in elums.
straimed. ~ 'they mterbd her otr. The hwb~ad Among phydclu~a, medicai studenta
It wab a quirk of fate that one didn't know about Saima's ~ddiction. ~~e ~1~~d profesdons~ drug
day when her father was ~wallowing By tbe dme he raliied the gravlty of � depeadency L relatlvely highea thaa
a pill. she asked 'How does it taste, ~e dtwti�n. S~lma had �lr�ady b�'� i� othet profeaiiona.
father?' 'It tastea funny; he replied. �0~e the mother of two child:ea. Addiction oP narcotlce amoag
Raraly did he take mandrax to refleve Today thelr mtrrlage L on the ~~~dty studeat~ i~� due more to an
the acute pain he sometimes exper- rocks. Salma. now a womu~ of 30, a~8 out behaviavs~ a dieplay of
ienced in his ~houlders. would do anything - atal moneY,� ~~~n ag~ut the norau and
For Salm'a it wae much mon ~0ll her jewellery - just to buy the~ mora of a soaety. Slnce narootica
drug. Meanwhlle, her family dieia� htcna~e faatesY and iaaer livbg~ the
than a funay faliag. It was a curious t te~. ~tudaaU taice it for bxperlmenting'.
caeousal - a raphsody in xnaations. ~Solma was recendy treated in a ~ for'kick~'
- She felt light as a feather afloat amid ~,ate p~ychiatrlc hoepit,l. But what "Dtug addicdoa emoag fmnala
the eoft colours of a melting rain- ~ her chanoes of getting out of the ~mparatively Iower~E not rue,
bow. It was sheer ecstacy. bizarre dru world? 1a Pakiitm. It h main~y a mde prob-
Soon after her fun venture ~ lmn~ not only here but 'ttuoughout
with mandrax, Salma'e Pather went to The chancea are dim. 3elf-ma the worJd;' ~yo Dr. Mohammad
J libya. Thia Yime he took along hu tivation i~ ee~enti~l for the treatmer?t Zaheer Khaa~ Hetd of the Deptrt-
12
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- meat of AYd~'7'. ~~P~+i "Ttie ~patbs'~t atop~ conaltlai Maadi. Aaothet ~mce it = waiteD
' the doatoi and keepr oa udag the aorldaB ia g cmteen at tha amput
"The Dm8 Add~ction Uait ~vq pre~aiptba tndeSoite~y. Addictian ~ one uouUY cons Rs,SO.
a~tsbWhed ia 1977: Si~s thon ~ve? gradually ata~ts aftac a(ba moathe
hsre trated about 60Q padeat~. Onti Siaca the wvmaa 4 droanY s~od a Thr studeat~ bura the none w~th a
of thh m~mber oaly ~bc were femaies: the tfine~ it aeata a lot of probbaaa b��Om~ ~~a '~e
in th~. houNho~. UltimatelY~ thit it, b than csuihed aad pu
- SNepy ddid , dta 2-3 yearti tbe. ia brou~ltt to th~ clgerett~s 1a Place of tobacco. One
~ ~tone can make up to S cigatettes.
��Ia We~tera oouatrles tha ntia "Women dd~cb ~e few and Th0 ~�uP of addi~s at the Karachi
of mab ~ad femals addictt ~�4s1. IaF these ara reawna for it. To become UniversitY comprise a. signiti~~s4t
onr oouatry the ntb. I aronld s~Y~; Q~~~ You muat have ac~ea to ~m~ of for~gaers. _ ` �
is evan le~ tbaa 100:1. Thit e~nate~ p~ to get the d~ You rau~ Univeiaides alwaYs have a cer
i~ ~upported by ovr diniwl expa~-� have� 1) moneY W buy it~ and~ 2) ~ numbar of studeau who behave
ieaoe~ (beth ~t P~~ ~~t� h'O? knoatad~e at aucce (flrom whore to ~ a~O~y d�viaat way. Sociolo�
phali) a~ wdl u ttwre of oar friendt'' buy .ft). Womm~ due to eoonomic ~u �O~a it a baromoter of dis�
workin~ io ~il~t oe~re~ e~tablW~- md reetrlcted raova ~n~t in societY as a whole. The
ed in Hyda~abad; L~1?ore~ Ye~1?a~r. pre~onceived notions about cunpus
meat. nefthee have money nor � ~a geaatate the recuain6 nemowr
etc. We mest lreqvent?,y~~i~~ coatact wlth the auctx." that "drug addiction ~i on the inc-
lon~. hence m sanre oi t!u exi~~ ra~~e at the universitY:' In view of
treads ia dru~ addicdoa ~ ovae tlu � Ondd~ wodd the luk of clinical teseuch and
conatry. . _ ~ o~operly conducted surnYs. the bias
- "��Dm~ ~dd~ction emoa~ fmnalef Coatace wlth t!?e outdde wo:ld u~1 too IPPacent.
ia bwac ~oc~o~eootamlc ~oyP la , _ the mals~dominatad world - p~~ examPle of thia bias
rertcicud. W opium. la nual ~ra:'~ m~lca tba youa; ~ttl with pramorbW is evideat~-fI-ie foIIowZnB itudy: .
~~~y~uy ~~o panon~lity more ~u~ceptlble to pn Novembet 1S,_1974, a zepott wu
honrehoW. Ths sur~l aom~a hu s sddlcdon, Heace ia prU' aollege~ ft publlitied in s local aewspapei whicb
Iugo numba oY ddidsea.. H~tlde~ ~ fouad an.~oa~ }.liors ~IrL who mix ~q~ ~t 1096 of the campui
doin~ the lwau chota aad workin~ vd date bnelY with boyt. Similat is ~enb wese dzug addicu. After
on th~ f!elQ, ~hs flter~llY ~ no dma; he a~s wtth ~cL nudyia~ in Uoiver� s Y~. oa Septembet 16, 1975,
bePt to look ~t'ter the chil~ea proper~ ~~0~ new~ appeared about a surveY iadica%
~ or ~~yv For inftance, take tlze c~~e of ~ g~ oat of the tota~
Ruby. Atti~ed in a tl~ht-t]tted ~l� ~~n of Karachi UnivOr~ity;
tion. ~~Heace ~he ~ oQium to the. wuqameea ~uft~ with a ba~ hooked ~p Howaver ic 7+uawrY 1976 thU
howlia~ chi{d to keep him quiat.i ovec_}~t ~houldam. a fite ia hei Lp: ~y~ btear up esradcaUY. itw~
t,~pstm m~lcet tha, ~hild ~leePY ko1~J ~a he~r iimond aluP~ stated by ths thea proviacW He~tbt
lethac~ic. She maY iaice opium her~+ a ci~a[ette !n her nwuth. ahe looks~ SeQehry tbat 4099~. s~~~ts! Td
seK to raDere the ~chk~ of hes bodY! reduc~e. H1ddeA. behiad We 6~ Untv~n~itY we~ d~8
whicb iewit fi4m ov_ac~wo~:' ~lrcubbry. swsy irom the bu~ put it ~ moce simPlY. it meaM tlut frt
~ Att~ lobby of the Kanchl Uaiva~ty, an aver~e clus of 2S, there at 1Q
~~Dye to tP~is p~ttern. ~omedmeA dts ~adr~ jaan~L~d boye aha d:us addict~ ia front of the teacher!
mothe~ oad d~ild devebp addicdon~ ~ w~ duin~ wlth pMO, rym� If today the aumber of.drug
~ dmult~�eowlY. We came acroa thaee ~ ddicu at the Unives~itY hu inc~eu-
~uch pdra..We ada~itted the mothert Se~tw oo~uciow ~ ed~ ~0 1~u it~ total papuLtion aad sa
- alongaith .their ddWren. Oae wu a. hu the numbaz of ineat~Y siclc
boy of 4, whib the other two w~e Ruby bdotW to a poup oi ~p~ ~ughout the awntry. In'
gitL ot 6~ oad 7 yan of rpe. TheY' rtudenb at the UniverdtY who Wn thia coatsxt it ~hould M cemember=
had oome f:om rur~l Slud for the ~ Yor kidc~'. She oema fiom a ~~ut drug ~ddictien ie selated. W:
ueatrnmt.'� well~ott fanaity. Hei~ L th~ ordin~Y meatd health problem~ and i~ dud�.
"The other th~ women w~e, staturooa~clow tioueehoW beNt tied u a peranal.ttY diacder. �
treated aroce sddicced to traaeiuifl; rrlth ~ocLl psobNm~ pre~ilent lo .~e.
it ia urlraaite lnce S~lms. a,
~ un. TheY belonged to the uppa- ~dy- cWt nrau. Hec famW~ nudent 1flce~Ruby os ~~inr~l opfi~:
middledtr. Addlctbn to ~edativai telatbn~tfiPe ~re aot p~rdcularlY atec~ dtui addiction amons females�
uw11Y beg~u ~tar thaa d~ ua ~et~l. She pidced up the Aabit at b relatively mote ilarn?ic~ md daa�:
~ibed by the p6yddsni ta the Uni~dtY� Basous. Conrtant drug fatake ptodu,.
ralbv~e the sym?toau of uucietY iad: The ~tudente anoke haehflh� oe~ chemiat c2sanges within tha bod~
depn~os. Tha ~ocW enviroamenb ~ made from the nida of ry~: The rlik ot bdr~ a~ec�
and ths fsa~ oondtdon~, the ~ ~+abti plant. it aomes fa the shape tive ddld. mantariy ratarded or mon-
~ouroe of mxiatY. hoaavae remaia~ oi mull wkesl The rtwlont~ ~oloid~ 4 eaormowlY 1d8t? m.~
the iame ~nd do not ~nee.x~11~ ~Il it 'rtoiw'. TboY B~ thas stone~ femal~ dmB'+ddict-
dtus-fnteke. . ~ . . _ ~om a dn~~peddlez fouad in Sabzi _ . .
CSO: 5300/4576
'.3
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PAICI STAN
BRIEFS
CfiARAS, OPIUM SEIZED--Rawalpindi, Dec. 10--The Customs Intelligence squad in a
= ~aid near Hasan Abdal yesterday recovered narcotics worth lakhs af rupees and ar-
rested two persons in this conrection. According to reports, t~e intelligence
staff on learning that two persons, identified as Hashim Khan and Akbar IQian com-
- ing to Rawalpindi in a Car (No. P.E. 326) had contraband with them. The suspected
car was stopped near Hasan Abda1 f~r checking. A total of about 21 kgs of charas
_ and opium were recovered, hidden ~Pie car. In annther raid near ^_'axila Excise
authorities in collaboration witYi the police, arrested two person~, identified as
_ Iiaquat Ali and Azmat Parvez and recovexed about one kg of opium anc~ a minute
quantity of charas. [Text] [Karachi DAWN in English 11 Dec 81 p 8]
CUSTOMS CONTINUE SEARCHING SHIP-- Special squads of the Drug Enforcement Cell (DEC)
continued rummaging of mv "Pusrur " for the fourth day yesterday following recovery
of 8.5 kgs of heroin on Thursday last. The vessel was scheduled to sail for
Liverpool when it was detained resulting in the signing-off of the Captain anc~ t}ie
Chief Officer and the arrests o� four crew members now in Customs custody till
pec 21. Customs sources said they had information that more drugs were secreted
in the ship. They alleged that the ship had been involved in "at least three sim-
ilar cases" and was last detained in Sweden following recovery of 36 kilos of
hashish, besides yielding 80 kilos of hashish prior to its voyage a few months ago.
[Text] [Karachi DAWN in English 14 Dec 81 p 10]
CSO: 5300/4576
~ 14
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- MEXICO
- DRUGS FROM GERMANY SEIZED, TRAFFICKERS CAPTURED
Ciudad Juarez EL FRONTERIZO in Spanish 2 Dec 81 Sec B p 10
[Text] Mexico City, 1 December (OEM)--Agents from the FBI, and the Mexican and
German INTERPOL, are seeking additional "fat fish" of the international drug traffic
underworld that has been operating for the past 3 years in Europe and America, sell-
ing psychotropic substances.
= Among the leaders of the international gang ~f fugitives is the German, Claus Kesting,
a partner in the German pharmaceutical firm Globe Chemical, as well as another indi-
vidual of Mexican nationality, whose name was not provided so as not to hamper the
investigation.
Only three of the drug traffickers were captured by the federal agents, when they
discovered in the port of Veracruz a ship of Swedish registry, which had arrived
from Hamburg, Germany, carrying nearly 5,000 kilograms of a psychotropic substance
known as metaqualone, for producing the drug called Mandrax in pill form.
Javier Coello Trejo, agent of the Federal Public Ministryfor special affairs, said
that the drugs were worthy 775 million pesos, and were to be distributed on the
black market in Mexico and the United States.
Comdr Florentino Ventura, chief of INTERPOL in Mexico, said that the substance in
powdsred form (metaqualone) was processed in a clandestine laboratory located in
Tepic, Nayarit.
Moreover, it was reported that an investigation is being made of the pharmaceutical ~
firm American Medicinal Industry (IMA), with which the drug traffickers concealed
their illegal activities in order to bring in the psychotropic substances.
- The three subjects in custody, the German Holder Markman Mamero, and the Mexicans
Manuel Arnulfo Lopez and Hector Manuel Godoy Calderon, were taken to the Eastern
Preventive Prison, at the disposal of the seventh district judge of penal affairs.
, 2909
CSO: 5330/59
15
9
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MEXICO
OFFICIALS WITNESS i[NCINERATION OF SEIZED MARIHUANA
H. Matamoros EL BRAVO in Spanish 15 Oct 81 Sec A p 14
(Text] Yesterday morning, in the presence of various federal officials, the incine-
. ration began of over 200 kil~grams of marihuana which had been seized a few days
ago by the Federal Judicial Police commander, Victor Manuel Martinez Guerra, and
� }iis agents.
The burning of the marihuana took place at exactly 1330 hours yesterday, Wednesday,
on the grounds of tt~e Industrial City located on Lauro Villar Highway.
Alfredo Olivares Osuna, agent of the Federal Public Ministry, headed the operation
starting the burning of the 19 bags of marihuana. ~
- Six soldiers and several Federal Judicial Po1~Lce agents guarded the extensive area
where the drugs were burned, to prevent any assault that might be made by those
affected by the seizure of that shipment.
It took half an hour to convert the entire heap of marihuana,consisting of the
contents of. the 19 ba~s seized on the banks of the Rio Bravo on the site of the
- E1 Ebanito communal farm,into ashes.
In addition to.Alfredo Olivare~ asuna, Federal Fublic Ministry agent, the incinera-
tion of the drugs was overseen by Federal Judicial Police Commander Victor Manuel
Martinez Guerra and ]First Capitan of the Cavalry Heriberto Bella Carrillo, represent-
ing Ceneral Luis Molina Cervantes, coi�mander of the district garrison, and Dr Gilberto
Yarritu Saez, director of ttie health center.
The af.orementioned authorities stated that, during the course of 1 month, nearly
700 kilograms of marihuana resulting from the latest blows dealt' to the region's
organized drug traffic have been burned.
2909
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~ r~xzcu
BRIEFS ~
DRUGS SMUGGLED FOR PHARMACEUTICALS--Mexico City, 30 November (OEM)--The Office of
- the Attorney General of the Republic captured 11 officials and employe`es of State of
Mexico pharmaceutical laboratories who had smuggled drugs worth several million
p~sos into the country for making medicines. Those in custody, whose names were
not released, worked at the IMA, SA, Laboratories, and have been questioned in the
PGR lockup on Soto Street, on the corner of Reforma Avenue, in the Guerrero district.
Several days ago, the artorney general, Oscar Flores Sanchez,had been informed that
officials of the aforementioned firm were illegally brii,ging raw material, chiefly
drugs, into the country for the manufacture of inedicines. For this reason, he
ordered Javi~r Coello Trejo, agent of the Federal Public Ministry for special affairs,
to conduct the investigation of the case. [Text] [Culiacan EL SOL DE SINALOA in
Spanish 1 Dec 81 p 8] 2909
JAIL DRL1G DEALERS SENTENCED--Yesterday, the third district ~udge, Ricardo Rodriguez
Villarreal, issued a sentence of l years in prison and a fine of 1,000 pesos for
two individuals who were found guilty of a crime against health in the degrees of
drug trafficking, possession and sale. Jesus Jimenez Gallegos and Roberto Rendon
Ordonez are the two sub3ects who were given the aforementioned sentence, having
committed these crimes when they were incarcerated in the La Loma Prison, after
being tried for similar crimes. From record 183-79 initiated on the foregoing
persons, it was learned that, during a search which the prison director, Hector
Garcia Trevino, made of the cell of Jesus Jimenez Gallegos, he was found to have
345 toxic pills, 16 grams of heroin and 6 grams of raw opium. When the federal
prisoner was questioned, he said that the drugs were owned by Roberto Rendon Ordonez,
who was confined in cell No 6 of the ~ail, and that they had been turned over to
him to sell arnong the addicts in La Loma. Also during the investigation, it was
learne.d that the drug traffic~.ers' supplier was someone known to them by the nick-
name "Pata-Pata", who lived in Guadalajara. They claimed that the supplier notified
them of the day and hour when he would take the drugs to the prison, They were
brought in bags tied wtth rock~ and thrown over the fence of the prison, to be sold
subsequently in the jail itself. [Text] [Nuevo Laredo EL DIARIO DE NUEVO LAREDO in
Spanish 1 Dec 81 Sec C p 3] 2909
NOVEMBER ANTIDRUG CAMPAIGN RLSULTS--During November, 101 persons were arrested by
- the Federal Judicial Police as individuals presumed guilty of various crimes
- classified as injurious to health, in the permanent campaign being carried out by
that entity to prevent and combat the drug traffic in the staCe. According to '
Feports provided by Hector Aviles Castillo, coordinator for Zone 06 of the permanent
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campaign against the drug traffic established by the Office of the Attorney General
of the Republic, nine long-barreled and 12 short-barreled weapons, with 296 useful
cartridges, were confiscated from some of those in question. In addition, a total
of 249 kilograms and 819 grams of marihuana, 800 grams of poppy seed and 7 kilograms
and 202 grams of opium gum, as well as eight toxic pills, were seized, one laboratory
was destroyed, and 11 vehicles which had been used for the illegal activities were
- confiscated. The cuordinator for Zone 06 explained that the action to destroy plan-
tations was intensified, since weather conditions allowed for this. The result was
that 286 poppy plantations covering an area of 73,650 square meters were fumigated,
and 11 marihuana plantations on an area of 30,760 square meters received the same
treatment. He added that 1,611 poppy plantations, on an area of 507,767 square
meters, were destroyed manually, while four marihuana plantations over an expanse
� of 9,929 square meters were razed. [Text] [Culiacan EL SOL DE SINALOA in.Spanish
4 Dec 81 p 6J 2909 ~
CSO: 5330/59
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PERU
DRUG TRAFFICKERS, METHODS, REHABILITATION PROGRAM ~
Drug~Traffickers Execution
Santiago LA NACION in Spanish 9 Nov 81 p 8 B
_ [Text] Lima, 8 Nov (ANSA)--The bloody war to the death be~tween international gangs
of narcotics traffickers, apparently directed by Italian-Americans, continues to
hold the attention of the main local newspapers. "Give up, Buccolo; your life is
in danger," the police call out at the stronghold of the alleged chief of a narcotics
traffick3.ng mafia which has already executed--in Italian vendetta s~yle--some eight
persons linked to the illegal drug traffic. During the last week Lima has been
shocked by reports of barbarous crimes against one Japanese and three Italian
citizens, murdered in cold blood in the streets. The police appear to have found
the thread which will lead to the uncovering of a powerful narcotics trafficlcing
organization headquartered in Feru, the members of which could become millionaires
through the illegal export oi cocaine base to Europe and the potential U.S. market.
Pasquele Buccolo, owner of one of the best-known footwear industries in Lima, is
believed to be the "godfather" of the narcotics mafias operating in Peru. He was
released several months ago from Lur3gancho prison, where he had been held on charges
of possession of narcotics. Shortly after his release, Lima was shaken by the stxange,
savage and cold-blooded murders of one Japanese and three Italian citizens, victims
of knife and firearm attacks, not to mention evidence of torture all over their
bodies. Other mutilated corpses of persons linked to the narcotics traffic have
been found, but police have not released any further details about these unspeakable
crimes. Meanwhile they have deployed their best narcotics agents in the search for
Buccolo, whose life is threatened by a rival gang. It is said that Buccolo failed
to make drug shipments he contracted with another organization, in view of which
the mafia decided to execute Ruccolo and all his associates, among them a Japanese
industrialist.
Drugs Transported in Refrigerator Truck
Lima ~L COMERCIO in Spanish 28 Oct 81 p 14
[TextJ Police agents of the Antinarcotics Directorate have arrested a gang of
Colombian drug traffickers who were attemp~.~ng to transport back to their country,
in a sophisticated refrigerator truck for Erozen fish, 106 kg of cocaine valued at
200 million sols.
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_ 'I'he drn~; lu~d been p~clced inta five cc~rtons and placed inside the refrigerator
criic:k, wt~ere tl~ey w~re e~~sily camouflaged. The truck was due to leave for Colombia
with .LO tons of hake, and the trip was to take 7 days. The four Colombian traffickers--
ide?itiFied as Edgar Omar Martinez Romero (31), owner of the truck and the drug;
Nel~on de Jesus Berrios Hoyos (51), the gang's contact; Aristobulo Pineiro Espiti~
- (38), the driver; and Jose Rimel Baquero (26), an accomplice--and Maria Grandez
Lozano (a Peruvian) were arrested at a house in the Valle Hermoso district of
Monterrico which they rented for $40~ a montn. Inside the hosse the PIP [Peruvian
Investigative Police] found 20 kg of the drug in an inner tube from a tire. On
being interrogated, the prisoners said they were fish merchants and ~hat they had
come to Peru in a 10-speed refrigerator truck valued at $70,000, which they had
parked in a yard in the San Mig~.el district.
After locating the refrigerator truck, agents of the Antinarcotics Directorate--
which is headed by PIP Gen Berly Baca V., made a thorough inspection. They were
surprised to find inside the refrigerator chamber a, hollowed-out area covered with
six sheets of zinc. When those zinc sheets were removed, they found four inner tubes
tied toegether like sausages and containing a total of 86 kg of cocaine.
- The owner of the truck, ~dgar Martinez Romero, admitted it was the second time he
had hauled drugs. The first time was a year ago, when he transported 10 kg of PBC.
The second shipment was due to leave tomorrow in the refrigerator truck. This is
the second time this year that the PIP has found drugs hidden in inner tubes. The
investigation of this latest case was under the direction of PIP Lt Col Cesar Anco
Zegarra. The drugs, refrigerator truck and all the other paraphernalia found have
been impounded and will be turned over to the Executive Office for Drug ~Control
(OFECO).
Drug Rehabiliation Program Costs
Lima EL COMERCIO in Spanish 27 Oct 81 p A-18
[Text] Arequipa, 26 Oct--The rehabilitation of a drug addict requires an expenditure
af at least 6 million sols. Since the state does not have many beds for these
- p,iiients, parents who do not have such resources find themselves unable to have
_ their children rehabilitated. This was disclosed today at an antidrug conference
held here. In addition, medical spokesmen revealed that first stage "drug dependents"
, have a po~,sibility of being 50 percent rehabilitated; in the second stage they may
achieve 20 percent rehabilitation, but beyond that it is no longer possible to do .
anytliing for them.
Cocaine base was singled out as one of the most damaging drugs being used, because
its manufacture involves the use of a series of elemenr_s such as kerosene, potassium,
ammonia, chloride and other substances which penetrate the organism, destroy the
netve cells and, after causing the patient slowly to become incapacitated, leave
him brain-damaged.
It was revealed at the meeting that at this time marihuana is the most widely
distributed hallucinogen in Arequipa, followed by cocaine base and cocaine hydro-
chloride.
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The drug pusher was termed a despicable element because of h~s responsibility for
recruitment and conversion to drug addiction of a youth which is called to contributQ
to ti?~ clevelopment of. the country.
- In addition, Civil Guard Maj Hugo Vega Rioja of the Second Sector Commissar~ here
said that Peru currently produces 35,000 tons of coca leaves per pear, of which
� only 500 tons are expo.rted. Ten thousand tc*~s are consumed by thp Indian tribes
of the mountain regions in their traditional "chacchar" ceremony, and the rest dis-
~ appears mysteriously, to be made into PBC or cocaine hydrochloride. The police
chief also said that the country's parents, educators and people in general have a
serious responsibility to protect our youth, who must be taught fro~ an early age
about the dangers of drug use.
Trafficking Methods Uncovered
Lima EL CnMERCtO in Spanish 25 Oct 81 p A-22
[Text] The natural suspicion and wisdom of inembers of the Investigative Police have
been making an impression on the ever more ingenious methods used by narcotics
traffickers or "carriers" to try to smuggle drugs out of the country, and as of
Septembzr nearly 3,000 kg of narcotics had been seized thi~ year.
In thxs closed duel between the forces of order and organized crime--the majority
- of foreigners bein~ from Colombia--th~ most varied resources have been used on both
sides, ranging from the use of pre-Columblan or apparent archeological artifacts
to innocent jars of baby powder.
There is no lack of bold cases in which carriers have attempted to transport the
drug, spread out perfectly flat, in a hit album, in the heels of shoes, in fire
extinguishers and even in tins of apparen~ly juicy preserves.
These attempts have been successfully thwarted by the experience an~i thorough
knowledge of psychology of agents of the Directoxate for Investigati~: of the Illegal
Drug Traffic, headed by PIP Gen Berly Baca Valdivia.
This has permitted tl~e police to develop a very fine and effective instinct, suc:n
_ as when a Cuban national sparting a big "Afro" was pacing nervously about the
airport, and someone said that maybe he was a narcotics dealer. Indeed he was; he
was carrying the drug in his luxuriant, bouffant wig.
Ceneral Baca Valdivia said that policewomen play a very important role in detecting
drug traffic, since in many cases women have been arrested while carrying drugs in
their private parts or in false bosoms.
"Generally," Baca Valdivia said, "men and women fight hand in hand here against the
drug traffic, which in many cases has trickled down even to 12-year-old children,
wha are used as carriers, as well as distributors, of the drugs." A curious piece
of data offered by General Baca is that when these criminals have L�een captured,
very fe~~ times has ttiere been any disloyalty or "whistle-bloGring," since gene?-ally
they are great jokers or persons who want to cause troubl~ ~or others.
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He sai.d that among the problems most frequently encountered, generally, in their
work is lack of adequate resources, because the traffickers have fast automobiles,
planes and modern radio equipment, so they can change key frequently.
"For example, on the border wxth Colombia, in the midst of the jungle, we hav~ to
' move around pretty slowly compared with the extremely fast vehicles the narcotics
- traffickers have," General Baca said.
Even so, that office has m~ac: some good progress, and as of last September had
seized 2,491,779 kg of r.:~. aine base, 33,996 kg of washed base, 75,443 kg of
_ cocai.ne hydrochloride an~ ~~36 kg of marihuana.
A.so included was .5 kg of hashish, seized from a group of foreigners who thought
they would pass it off as cocaine.
Baca ~~aldivia indicated that rhe DEA [Drug Enforcement Administration], the U.S.
agency in charge of fighting the drug traffic, h~lps them a great deal_, sending
- vehicles and equipment as well as s~,ecialized instructors.
"But we need planes, helicopters, modern radio equipm~nt and more people. That
- is urgent," General Baca Valdivia emphasized, as he spoke at the aforementioned PIP
~ offices in Pueblo Libre.
8735
CSO: 5300/'?083
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IRAN
BRIEFS
DRUG ARRESTS--According to a repo rt by the PARS NEWS AGENCY, th e personnel of
the antinarcotics strike group, dispatched from the Islamic Revolution
Guards Corps, in Tehran, yesterday evening clashed with armed smugglers
in the vicinity of Zahedan acid managed to seize 220 kg of hashish, 2 kg of
lieroin, and 1 handgun from th ese merchants of death. According to this
report, in the course of the clash two smugglers were arrested and another
wounded. One of the brothers of the antinarcotics strike group also received
the lofty honor af martyrdom. [Text] [LD190512 Tehran Domestic Service in
Persian 1630 GMT 18 Dec 81 LD]
HASHISH HAUL__According to a repo rt by the Central News Unit, the public
relations department of the Islamic revolution antinarcotics public prosecutor's
office announced that tlze personnel of the central antinarcotics headquarters
managed to arrest two smuggler.s and.seize 101 kg of hashish, [Text] [Tehran
Domestic Service in Persian 1430 GMT 19 Dec 81 LD]
SHIRAZ DRUG ARREST--The Shiraz Islamic Revolution Guards Corps have arrested
a number of people for possession and distribution of 43 grams to 12 kg of
heroin and opium. [GF251920 Shiraz Domestic Service in Persian 1500 GMT
24 Dec 81 GF] ~
~ I)RUGS DISCUVEKED--'[he gendarmerie of the Islamic Republic of Iran announced that
the gendarmerie ofCicials of Sistan and Baluchestan, Khash, Lorestan and
Kermanshah have discovered more ttian 145 kg of heroin, opium and hashish during
th e past few days. [Text] [LD260 312 Tehran Domestic Service in Persian
0730 (~MT 25 Dec 81 LD] ' . ~
23
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SHIRAZ DRUG SEIZURE--Officials of the antidrug department of the Shiraz Islamic
Revolution Guard Corps have discovered and conf iscated 20 kg of opium juice
from a person with a criminal record. The trafficker was arrested and delivered
to court. [Text] [GF221704 Shiraz Domestic Service in Persian 1500 GMT 22 Dec 81 GF]
MASHHAD DRUG DISCOVERIES--According to a r.eport by the Mashhad police public
relations department, 31 grams of heroin was discovered at a house yesterday
in Mashhad by the antidrug squad. The owner was delivered to court. The .
Bojnurd police squad confiscated 22 grams of heroin from two persons. In
addition Sh irvan police personnel discovered 35 grams of heroin on a person.
[GF231844 Mashhad Domestic Service in Persian 1430 GMT 23 Dec 81 GF]
- RAIDS IN ZAHEDAN, TEHRAN--Shemiran, KEYHAN Correspondent. Thanks to the day-~nd-
night efforts last week of the brothers of the Central Antinarcotics Headquarters,
326.5 kilograms of narcotics were discovered. In an interview with the KEYHAN
correspondent, an official spokesma.n of the Central Antinarco~ics Headquarters
- stated: "Pursuant to the day-and-night effo�rts and persistence of the brothers
of the Central Antinarcotics Headquarters last week, 326.5 kilograms of narcotics
were confiscated from smugglers of dangerous drugs, as follows: "In an armed
clash which took place in the Zahedan area between brothers of the Operations
Headquarters and five narcotics smugglers, two persons named Nurbakhsh and Hazanzahi
as well as a wounded smuggler named Sohrab were arrested, but two got away.
Efforts to arrest them are continuing. Of the said amount, 150 kilograms of
hashish was discovered and, as a result, two other smugglers named Abdollah Khademi
_ and Emirollah Khademi were arrested, and 105 kilograms of hashish were seized
from them." A spokesman of the Antinarcotics Prosecutor's Office added: "The
brothers of the Operations Headquarters in Tehran arrested a person named Azizollah
Mosibi, and 28 kilograms of opium, four sundry weapons, one handgrenade, 200 sundry
cartridges were seized." He added: "Brothers of the Central Antinarcotics Head-
quarters have arrested four heroin smugglers in Tehran, and they confiscated 3.5
kilog,rams of heroin f rom them. As a result of the efforts of the brothez~s of the
Central Operations Headquarters in Tehran, more than 50 kilogr_ams of various
narcotics were discovered and, in this connection, several bands of smugglers were
arrested. Af ter preparation of police records and photographs, they were turned
over to the Central Antinarcotics Prosecutor`s Office. [Text] [Tehran KEYHAN
in Persian 20 Dec 81 p 1]
llRUG TRAFP'ICK~RS ARRESTED--The central news unit reports that the Mashhad antidrug
squad seized 420 kg of opium, 2,5 million tomans~in cash and 5 vehicles from a
big gang of traffick ers in Sabzevar. One man was arrested and three more are
Eugi.tives. This gang was engaged in smuggling from Pakistan via Zahedan to the
~ southern parts of Khorasan. [Mashhad Domestic Service in Persian 1430 GMT
23 Dec 81 GF]
AI (:HAN DRUG SrtUGGLING--The Torbat Heydariyeh police squad reports that 17 bags
of Af.glian op~um have been discovered in a border village. The bags weighed
115 kg. A person in this connection was arrested and delivered to court.
[Mashhad Domestic Service in Persian 1430 GMT 23 Dec 81 GF]
Ul' I UM CUNI~ I S CA'i GD--S ome 4 20 k ilo grams o f op ium, 2. 5 mill ion tomans and f ive
veliic:les were confis cated from smugglers, by the anti-narcotics officers in
Mashhad. Also, 162 kilcgrams of opium were confiscated and seven smugglers
were arrested by the anti-narcotics team in Khorramabad. [LD240600 Tehran
Domestic Service in Persian 1030 GMT 23 Dec 81 LD)
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UPIUM IIAUI, IN K110Rt~5AN--Shemiran, KIsYHAN Correspondent--Through the efforts of
officials of the Antinarcotics Headquarters of Khorasan d~iring the last ?-month
- period, 168 kilograms of opium, 20 kilograms of heroin, 18 kilograms of gold bars,
and 35 weapons were discovered, and a number of smugglers were arr~sted. In a
short talk with the KEYHAN correspondent, a spokesman of the Central Antinarcotics
Headquarters said: "Through the efforts and persistence of the brothers of the
Antinarcotics Headquarters of Mashhad during the last 2-month period, 168.462
kilogram,; of opium ~nd 20.7 kilograms of heroin were discovered". He added:
"Also, ir. pursuing this effort, these brothers found 18 kilograms of gold bars,
' and in other cities of Khorasan found 35 sundry weapons and a supply of ammuni-
tion". In this connection, a number of narcotics smugglers were found, arrested,
and turned over to the Prosecutor's Office of the Islamic Republic in Mashhad,
- and the said contraband items were turned over to the central headquarters. In
this connection, the spokesman requested the people of Khorsan, in :he interest
_ of the good order of the Islamic Republic, to report any informa.tion they might
have about narcotics smugglers and salesmen ko telPphone number 83000 of the
Khorasan headquarters . In conclusion, he added that the brothers of the Anti-
narcotics tieadquarters of the township of Ardabil found fifteen G-3 rifles and
Colt pistols plu~ a supply of ammunition along with the cuiYrits, all of which
were turned over to the Prosecutor's Office of the Islamic Republic in Ardabil.
[Text] [Tehran KEYHAN in Persian 8 Dec 81 p 14]
' CSO: 5300/5338
,
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UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
BRIEFS
OMANI SOLDIER ARRESTED--An Omani soldier was jailed for six months, f ined Dh 1,000
and ordered to be deported by the Dubai court yesterday for possessing drugs.
Shah Shambi Dhuh Shambi, 30, was arrested by the police on 15 December for pos-
sessing 40 grammes of opium. The man pleaded guilty. The president judge also
_ said that the man would serve ~ail term for another month if he failed to pay the
_ fine. [Text] [GF231905 Dubayy KHALEEJ TIMES in English 23 Dec 8].:p 3 GF] ~
CSO: 5300
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~ SOUTH AFRICA
POLICE BREAK UP COCAINE SMUGGLING RING
Johannesburg THE CITIZEN in English 15 Dec 81 p 2
(Article by Sandra Lieberum: "22 Arrested in Co~aine Ring Breakthrough"]
[Text~ AII iIItCrIIStiO~al OO- a~ throu~h ~nd oae of 4ur big-
CS~IIe ~IDtl~~g IICt- 1~ ~n ~ i~ tO Sesttver hauls."
work with a~ents ia ~ to as +~atla~ ot cocaine is saia eo be borb
dealin~ ia SS ~ of aoc~ia~ aad physicallY aad PaY~ological- .
Rio de Jaaeiro and Am wer~ ,~em,nde~ to ~bee ly addictive. but ia spite oF
9tP.Pd8m w~Ch 311p- ZR tbia. accordin~ to the narcot-
plies Johanneabur~ ad tcs c~ef. it seW for R200 000
d1Ct8 8t RiS pCr 9~f, mont6. on. is a k~, R200 a~ aad about Rl5
~~n Coloored. tw~o Adatk aad per snitf. The current Johaa-
lead~~ to thE bi~e8t the rest W6ite. Aaotl~er ru- neabur~ cost at da~a ia
pect was usesoed Lrt Wed- comparison is SOc
b8t11 of COCBi~C E'Y~r as~ Hecauee of its t~i~h coat
sei~Ed in South Africa.~ one at tbe 2Z, a m.n sn.- cbe pouoe hav~e found it pe~e-
Oae huadred aad il~q P~~ ~ b~ ~�L dominanW? aawn~ Johan-
~ram~es w~ortL R30 000. was lidc ia the aetw~a~rk ~D~ nesbur~'s northern suburbs
ad~sd. 2Z people wese ar~ sttes bsini ~ht to Jo- reaIdents aad mainlY at so-
resLed and tnrt6er s~upects ~bari folla~wln~ a:'e- dal ~atherin~s whexe users
are bela~ hdd nades Sectloa maed beid ia camera ia s daim ib use reduoes inhi-
18 ot the dirns lawa. Hemp~on Park courC bidona.
Alter tLs re~rrert an He e~caped iram a polia MaJ Vaa Rooyea aaid some
Snad4 ~ ot a man vehk~e in� Co~misda~er people eMen daimed t6at co-
svspected ot beio~ aa import 8traeY. Hir aKarae7 ~ad hb caine ~ave impotent mea seac
ttnlc In the net~rork. who Lad paseats arentna0,1 ~ drive.
e~rlter e~caped irom a polioe suaded ~!m W haal bim~ell When clinchin~ a deal, ad-
~rahicle aad t6m ~l~sn 1~ vver bo ths Pu11ae and he wa~ dicts usuall,V P1ace some on
aeK up~ Ma~ar Ifart~tnns ~aa raarrerted a~ Snadq. the tiP of their tonaue. This
Rooreq Johaaaabar~ Nar- The cocaine, accordin~ to is to test ft It is "ooke". If it
aoti~s CLiat. i~ D~n MaJ Van Rooyen, ~ not is, a numbaeas ~ets in.
~da~ ior Uu ynWkatba smu~led from overseas di- But the dan~er of the
o! the dataiL at tbe polic+e ao- rectly iato South Afrira. It is whiu crYstalline, taatelesa
doa, off-loaded in netghbourinB and santieas substaacY. Ma3
� AL a~pedal Preas oo~fer~ statea and Sonth African Van Rooyen aatd: was that
moe S(a~ Vaa Hoo'!'m taid pushers fetch their suPPliea. partides of cocaine remain-�
i~esdsatloas had rtarted Of the 150 a of cocaine ~ ye}~d ta the brid~e ot the
S~e moatlu y~o and ~vlmi- snatched, most is from Sol- ~~(ter sniffln~ and even-
nated ia Johrane~bar~'~ Jm ~ land The potice disc~ered it ~~jr ~au~ed irrltation aad
Smnb Atrpoart oa Ftidq De- mostly hidden on the bodies ~tructure causin~
oember 4 witL tbe arerest a[ of ~uspects. the nose to colLpse.
two gaodtaa rerid~nb, "In the last year we have ~~~y have
1Lin CLire Niao~a Ve~ become mon aware of ttie n~ reconstructid
mea~en (Zp) aad 3(r Yuk problems. O+ee cannot say byt after a while there is no
Da~id ga~wpd (23). both that the dru8 was not freely b~~~e lett for recon-
a[ Henaoee G~s~ w~ae+e available before, but in the g~~;on and the no~e
6e+uosht Dela~e 3~r J J de Iast few monttrs there has f~ flaL'�
Vries ia � tlff E4mptoo Park been a definixe incr~ase in To overoom~ this, oversea.~
Ya~trate's Coott ou Fsida7 itsuse. . uaers are re9ottin~ to re-
sod ~raot~ bdl d HS 000 "This is a maior break- ~lacemeat ~vith told struo-
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tusInr.
"Joha~esbur~ users have
- not reached the gold-bridge
- nose sta~e yet"
Mai Van Aooyea added a
warnin~ to those who have
_ tt3cd the drug. If a person is
found ia possessioa of evea
" Lhe smallest quantity of co-
cxins. the . pi^e~uanption �
comes into oper~tioa thz:
that person is dealin~ in tbe
dru~�
A first convictton carries a
miaimum jail sentence of
- five years' imprisorunent,
CSO: 5300/5616
- 28
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AUSTRIA
BRIEFS �
HASHISH IN VQRARI.B~RG--With the aid of narcotics dogs, police discovered 70 kilos
of cannabis in a wood near Langenegg, Vorarlberg on Saturday. The hashish, ~oorth
about 2 million schillings, had been smuggled from Turkey to Vorarlberg last
summer Uy 28-year-old Walter Flatz of Dornbirn, who has now been arrested,
togettier with a Turkish citizen who is at presen~ being detained by Swiss
police. In this connection, Austrian police also arrested 23-year-old Klaus Boesch,
an editor of NEUE VORARLBER~~R TAGESZEITUNG, as a dealer. [AU291520 Vienna
WIENER ZEITUNG in German 24 Nov 81 p 6 AU]
-i NARCOTICS SQUAD--Since its establishment in June, the new narcotics squad of.
; the Austrian police has been very successful: it has seized 17 kilos of heroin
anci smashed numerous dealer and dru~ addict rings. In addition to training new
squad members, Austrian police have launched a special information program for
the entire police force to raise police efficiency in combating drug abuse.
[Vienna DIE PRESSE in German 24 Nov 81 p 12 AU]
- cso: 5300/2105
29
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FRANCE
. BRIEFS
HEROIN SEtZURE--The largest drug haul of the year took place 24 hours ago at
Roissy airport where the drug squad arrested nine Chinese from Hong Kong
carrying 10 kilos of uncut heroin in their suitcases. [LD270840 Paris
Domestic Service xn French 0800 GMT 27 Dec 81 LD]
HEROIN TRAFFICKERS ARRESTED--Pa~is, 27 Dec (AFP)--Police smashed a"Chinese
- connection" gang on Christmas Day with the arrests of nine Chinese trying
to sell 10 kilos (22 lbs) of heroin from Bangkok. Last n~onth French police
arrested three Chinese in possession of three kilos (six-and-a-half pounds)
j of heroin, and learned that a major consignment of the drug was enroute here.
Police followed the heroin from Bangkok to Copenhagen to Nice, southern France,
i where four members of the Chinese gang arrived by air. The four then drove
j by car to Paris, where they were arrested on Christmas Day. Their heroin
' was 95 percent pure. The police named the alleged leader of the "Chinese
- connection" as Tak Sut, who was arrested with the others. [Text] [NC270914
Paris AFP in English 0807 GMT 27 Dec 81]
CSO: 5300/2108
30
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GREECE
BRIII+ S
DRUG TRAFF'ICKGRS A1~I~.ESTED--The known, marked and dangerous felon Ang. A. Vafias~ 32,
~ho is sought for ma~ crimes, was arrested by the Athens General Security ~t
Sourmena on charges af smug~ling narcotics in cooperation with Panag. I. Kammenos,
an Olympic Airlines ateward who waa also arrested upon his return frara New York
in his home at 1 Vyronos St., Kato Khaidari follawing surveill~nce by the police.
ln the Ka~aenos house police found 3 ldlograms of hashish and 100 gold pounda.
Durin~ the interrogation Kammenos revealed that Vafias lived at 27 A~hanasiou
Diakou, Sourmana~ and had ~iven him the hashiah to sell to drug addicts. The
~ police who thought Vaf3as was abroady acted immediate],y and arrested har~ at the
; above address. Unable to escape, Vafi~s unsuccessful~y tried to hide a bottle
containing 1~00 grams of hashish oil. The police also found 50~000 dracYanas in
, cash, scales for drug weighing and 500 more grams of hashish in a Fiat jeep parked
in front of his house. He admitted that he had su lied Kammenos with hashish
_ but refused to reveal his source of supply. ~ext~~thens I KATHIr'~ERINI in
Greek 27 Nov 81 p 2~ 7520
FRG EX'Pr~tADITION l3F~Ur.'.ST--In an open hearing tomorrow ths Athens S~Iember Court
of Appeals will discuss the West German Court request far the extradition of
Iranian Muhamet Samsibur, I~b, who was arrested at the Greek border--fo].lowing a
warning by Interpol--and who is being held at the Korydallos prison. The West
German authorities want to try h~m on charges of being a member of a dru
smu~~;ling ring which smuggled 25 tons of hashish from Iran to Europe. ~ext7
~thene I KATHIMh;RINI in Greek 25 Nov 81 p 17 7520
C~ : l~621/5334
31
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- r ITALY
BRIEFS
IIGRUTN SEI7.URE--Four kg with a retail market value of over 4 billion lira have
been seized by customs ~;uards at Linate airport in Milan. Two Syrian nationals
who were trying to smu~;~;1e t}?e drug into Italy were arrested. [Text] [LD290442
It~~mc I)omes tic Serv i ce i n Ita.l ian ].630 (~MT 28 Dec 81 LD ]
CSO: 5300/2110
32
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~ NETHERLANDS
BRIEFS
HASHISH ON LEBANESE FREIGHTER--Rotterdam, S Dec (AFP)--Police and customsmen
today unloaded the last of a huge smuggled cargo of hashish found aboard the ,
Lebanese freighter Sami here yesterday. The total quantity of the drug on board
the Sami, re~isterecl in the Lehanese port oF Tripoli, was 2,500 kilos (about
5,5OU ~~aunds weight), ~~olice sciid. They put its retail value at about
10 million florins (4 million dollars). The hashish, in tins, cartons, sacks
and packets, was tiidden under ~i false floor, among other places, and in
impermeable bagc in the sliip's fuel ~nd water tanks. Four members of the crew,
ttiree Lebanese and a Sudanese, have been arrested. Police were continuing
their inquir.ies and did not rule out further arrests. [Text] [NC051414
' Paris AFP in Engl ish ].323 cr~r 5 Dec 81]
i
cso: 5300/2104
33
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UNITID KINGDOM
BRIEFS
MURDER OF PRINCIPAL WITNESS--Lagos, December 9--A principal witness in the case
of a large quantity of Indian hemp discovered in diplomatic bags in the
Nigerian High Commission (Embassy) in London has been murdered, according to
a Nigerian Government statem2nt. The statement, issued yesterday by the
President's Office, said the witness, whose name was not disclosed, was killed
_ in his London f~at last Saturday. The murder "suggested that an international
syndicate might be behind the episode," the statement said, adding that
investigations had revealed that the hemp was smuggled in bags normally
used for sending Nigerian newspapers to overseas missions. (AFP) [Text]
- [Paris AFRICA AFP in English No 2853, 11 Dec 81 p 15]
- .
CSO: 5300/2111 END
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