Girl killed to act as drug mule in Gulf

greenspun.com : LUSENET : TB2K spinoff uncensored : One Thread

Girl killed to act as drug mule in Gulf

Brian Whitaker, Middle East editor Wednesday May 10, 2000

Drug smugglers abducted and killed a small girl, then stuffed her body with drugs in order to take them into a Gulf state, a senior police officer was reported as saying yesterday.

Officials at the unnamed airport saw a woman cradling the child in her arms, apparently asleep. As the woman passed through immigration control an officer teased the child, but there was no response. Then he realised she was dead.

Sympathy quickly turned to horror when officials discovered that the girl's body was packed with drugs. They concluded that she had been killed for the specific purpose of smuggling narcotics.

Major Abdul Rahman Naser al-Fardan, head of the drugs squad in Sharjah, one of the seven states in the oil-rich United Arab Emirates, was describing how smugglers are resorting to increasingly desperate and cruel measures to conceal their wares.

They have been known to pack drugs inside the Koran or in the frames of Islamic art. In one case a blind man had a white stick full of drugs.

The Gulf has long been recognised as a staging post for drugs on the route from Pakistan and Afghanistan to Europe. It is also believed by some to be a money-laundering centre for the proceeds.

In states where alcohol is prohibited and drugs offend social and religious sensibilities, the problem is officially portrayed as a foreign one. Asians are blamed for 80% of drug dealing and the authorities become coy at suggestions that part of the trade may be aimed at a local market.

The Emirates does, however, have several drug rehabilitation centres.

Although Major Fardan does not admit to a drug abuse problem in the Emirates, his remarks, in a talk to Zayed University students reported by Gulf News yesterday, highlighted concern that the rich - and often bored - Emirates youngsters could be at risk.

He warned that parents should not allow their children to travel alone to countries where drugs are sold openly, or which are known to have "addiction dens".

Drug abuse among wealthy Arabs tends to be hushed up, with offenders sent by their families for medical treatment. Smuggling and dealing, on the other hand, attract severe penalties. Executions are common in Saudi Arabia, and there have been several in Kuwait and the Emirates - though there the penalty depends on the type of drug and the amount involved.

Eman Abdullah, who reports on crime in Dubai, said the most common drug in the region is hashish. In Kuwait, opium is said to be popular.

The drug stuffed inside the child's body at the airport was codeine, a synthetic opium-related painkiller used medicinally in the west but not freely available in the Gulf. A spokeswoman for Release, the drug advice organisation, said: "It's quite a powerful painkiller and people can become dependent on it. In Britain there's a small black market. It might be used by addicts as a substitute for heroin."

Kuwait is the only Gulf state which publicly acknowledges that it has a drug problem. According to local press reports there are more than 29,000 drug addicts, in a population of 1.7m. Almost half of the 2,000 prisoners in the central jail are there for drugs offences.

-- Uncle Bob (unclb0b@aol.com), May 10, 2000

Answers

Interesting story. But, anytime I hear words like "officials at an unnamed airport," the urban myth alarm bells go off. Plus, my personl suspicion is that anyone willing to kill children is going to be in to smuggling something more lucrative than codeine.

In other words, don't believe everything you read on the internet.

-- E.H. Porter (Just Wondering@About.it), May 10, 2000.


E.H. -

The article is from the online edition of The UK's Guardian and Observer, which are fairly respectable news sources.

-- DeeEmBee (macbeth1@pacbell.net), May 10, 2000.


DeeEmBee-- yes, I took that into account. But, most of the world's urban myths seem to have been picked up by news accounts at least once. I suspect that this account made the Observer because it was reported by an actual identified official-- "Major Abdul Rahman Naser al-Fardan." As such, it is news -- whether true or not -- because it is being stated as true by a government official.

I still question the truth of the underlying report; why could not the good Major name the actual airport involved?

-- E.H. Porter (Just Wondering@About.it), May 10, 2000.


Unc

This story in not unique to the middle east. I personally know of a woman here in southern Arizona who was hospitalized in a mental health facility after experiencing a similar situation with her small child. She had gone to Nogales, Az (right on the border) with her 3 or 4 year old (I forget which) to shop (it's a major tourist attraction). The child had let go of her hand while she was distracted for a minute talking to shopkeeper. In a panic she started searching for him in vain; he was no where to be found. She went up and down the streets looking for him. When she got to the border, she saw him sitting in a car on the other side of the border (through the chain link), crossed the border, and went to the car. Relieved she had found him sleeping, she took him out, thinking he was sleeping, and proceeded to go back to the American side. The INS agent looked at the child over her shoulder, and saw that the child's throat had been slit. They called the paramedics and took him to Holy Cross hospital who pronounced him DOA. When the medical examiner took off his clothes, he had been gutted and his chest was packed with cocaine. The mother was in the psychiatric unit trying to deal with. This happened last year. The cops said they don't report this kind of incident to the media out of respect for the families trying to deal with, but it happens on a regular basis and is not unusual. Incredibly sad but true.

-- Aunt Bee (SheriffAndy@Mayberry.com), May 11, 2000.


Aunt Bee:

The Gulf story does have the feel of an urban myth but yours it totally unbelievable. A mother could pick up her child and not notice her throat was cut? Wasn't the child was a little cold and stiff? These drug smugglers managed to gut the child, stuff her with drugs, and then sew her up so her mother didn't notice that either. Then, the drug smugglers managed to leave her cocaine filled body alone so the mother could find her and snatch her away after they did all this work?

You've got to be kidding.

-- Jim Cooke (JJCooke@yahoo.com), May 11, 2000.



Moderation questions? read the FAQ