Wednesday, August 28, 2024 - The UK Government has revealed that cannabis traffickers deceive people into believing the country is lax when it comes to cannabis trafficking at its borders.
UK Officials say most of the couriers, who can be paid up to
£10,000, are arriving from countries which have legalised cannabis for personal
use and are allowing cultivation.
Hundreds of cannabis couriers have been caught trying to
smuggle suitcases full of the drug through British airports.
The UK says couriers are being duped by traffickers into thinking
the UK authorities are soft on cannabis and will let them off with a fine,
according to the National Crime Agency.
A man who landed from Los Angeles with 158 kilos of the
Class-B drug - with a street value of £1m in his and his children's bags was
jailed for more than three years in July, also 11 British passengers from
Thailand were arrested this month at Birmingham airport when Border Force
officials allegedly found 510 kilos of cannabis in their bags.
Charles Yates, the NCA's deputy director, said: "It's
quite brazen. Couriers are just walking through the airports with suitcases
full of cannabis, thinking they are not going to be detected and if they are
all they will get is a fine.
"The reality is very different and we are making many
arrests and seeing couriers go to jail. The figures have risen dramatically in
the past couple of years."
The NCA says there were 17 such arrests in 2022, 136 in 2023
and 378 so far this year. In the same period, the amount of cannabis seized has
gone up from two to 15 tonnes.
Most of the couriers come from Canada, Thailand, Germany and
parts of the United States, where Cannabis is legalized.
Yates said many among the UK's two million weed smokers
believed, wrongly, that cannabis grown legally was a better, stronger product
and were prepared to pay more for it.
"Actually, the THC content (potency) is relatively
similar between UK grown and legally grown cannabis. I think the drug
traffickers are just good at marketing it in the UK."
Canadian Chelsea Allingham, 40, arrived at Heathrow from
Toronto in May with two suitcases full of cannabis and had reached the bar of
her hotel when NCA officers walked up and arrested her in handcuffs.
Border Force officers had detected the drug, but let
Allingham collect her bags from the carousel and followed her as she handed
them over and settled down to have a drink. She was jailed for 10 months.
NCA Director General of Threats James Babbage said: "We
would appeal to anyone who is approached to engage in smuggling to think very
carefully about the potential consequences of their actions, and the risks they
will run.
"We know organised criminals can be persuasive and
offer to pay couriers. But the risks of getting caught are high, and it just
isn't worth that risk.
"The NCA is actively working with partners like Border
Force here in the UK, and law enforcement internationally to target those
involved in drug supply, including the networks behind it. Targeting those
smugglers who play a crucial role in the supply chain is one way we can do
that."
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