International
Dhaka seeks death penalty for drug traffickers
Dhaka seeks death penalty for drug traffickers
April 05, 2018 | 09:38 PM
Bangladesh wants to punish methamphetamine traffickers with the death penalty, officials said yesterday, as authorities confront the growing popularity of the dangerous and addictive drug.The proposal to crackdown on the spread of methamphetamine, known locally as “yaba”, comes after Bangladesh seized more than 40mn pills of the narcotic in 2017 — double the previous year.Authorities want to elevate yaba to a Class A banned substance, meaning traffickers would face the death penalty instead of life behind bars.“We’ll raise the punishment for yaba trafficking. In the new law the maximum punishment will be (the) death sentence,” Jamaluddin Ahmed, the head of Bangladesh’s narcotics control department, told AFP in the capital.Bangladesh law enforcement say the drugs are smuggled across the porous border from Myanmar.Ahmed said traffickers had been more active since August, when Rohingya refugees fleeing violence in Myanmar began pouring into Bangladesh.Gangs had been using the Rohingya as mules and hiding drugs in fishing boats used to ferry the persecuted Muslims to safety.“Recently there has been such a huge inflow of yaba from Myanmar that it has become increasingly difficult for us to control it. As a result, its use has also increased,” Ahmed said.Raids of fishing boats have uncovered huge hauls of the drug.Authorities said last week that nine mn yaba tablets were seized in less than three months as the refugee influx reached its peak.Nearly two mn pills were discovered in a single haul.Towfique Uddin Ahmed, a director at the narcotics control department, said authorities estimate $600mn worth of yaba could be sold on Bangladesh’s streets this year.One senior official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said “drastic action” like the violent crackdown on drug users and dealers in the Philippines could be needed to stamp out the drug.“Some (traffickers) should be put in the crosshairs. We have come to that point,” he said.
April 05, 2018 | 09:38 PM