Tanzania: Drug Authority removes coverage of new trafficking methods



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Dar es Salaam – The Anti-Drug Authority has arrested three suspects in what detectives say is a breakthrough in exposing new tactics the ‘mules’ were using to continue trafficking narcotics.

The arrests were of a 25-year-old janitor in Dar es Salaam and two male suspects in Kigoma, who were charged with separate charges of trafficking in prohibited drugs in the country. Both were arrested in an undercover operation that lasted several days of surveillance.

According to the Commissioner General of the Drug Enforcement and Control Authority (DCEA), James Kaji, the arrests are testimony to the continued efforts to overcome the changing tactics of traffickers.

He warned that some drug dealers were cunningly luring Tanzanian women into the business by marrying them and then turning them into ‘mules’, unknowingly or knowingly. Yesterday she was addressing a press conference in Dar es Salaam.

The woman, identified as Mary Edson, was arrested while mailing two books to India containing about 450 grams of heroin. The books were reportedly sent to him from Uganda by a Nigerian man with whom he had lived briefly. She has a son begotten by the Nigerian who moved to Uganda and continues to live in Uganda, from where she sent the books for shipment to India.

“According to her, the books she was sending were for her boyfriend in Uganda, who wanted them to be mailed to a friend in India. She has done so at least three other times,” Kaji said. The woman, who resides in Tegeta, was arrested on September 17 when she tried to send the two books. But she was also found with a heroin scale at her home, suggesting she knew what she was doing. She claimed that her Nigerian boyfriend left the machine.