Saudi Arabia has rounded up 210 suspected drug smugglers in a series of raids since mid-June in which three security officers were killed, an Interior Ministry spokesman said on Wednesday.
Security forces carried out 18 raids across the conservative Muslim country, killing two smugglers and seizing drugs with a street value of 330 million riyals ($88 million), said the spokesman, who was quoted by the official SPA news agency.
Drugs confiscated in the three-month raids included nearly ten million stimulant pills and 6.4 tonnes of hashish.
"Drugs are aimed at undermining the country's security in addition to the problem of terrorism," Abdullah al Yousef, undersecretary of the Ministry of Social Affairs, told state television.
The spokesman said 113 of those arrested for the smuggling or possession of drugs were Saudis while most of the rest were Pakistanis, Yemenis, Syrians and Filipinos.
The kingdom applies strict Islamic sharia laws, executing drug smugglers, murderers and rapists, usually by public beheading. Saudi Arabia announced Wednesday that its anti-narcotics agencies have arrested 210 people for smuggling, selling and possessing various types of drugs valued at more than SR330 million in the last three months.
Maj. Gen. Mansour Al-Turki, spokesman of the Interior Ministry, said the arrested included 113 Saudis, 31 Pakistanis, 21 Yemenis, 18 Syrians, 11 Filipinos, five Egyptians, three Indians, three Ethiopians, two Eritreans, a Sudanese, a Kuwaiti and a Jordanian.
He said three drug enforcement officers were killed and three others injured during 18 gunbattles with drug smugglers. Two smugglers were also killed while four others were injured. One smuggler who had swallowed hashish bags died.
Al-Turki said officers foiled 17 attempts to smuggle 8.98 million Captagon capsules, 1,320 kg of hashish and 5.59 kg of heroin. “In another operation, they seized 4,399 kg of hashish and 439,671 Captagon capsules,” he pointed out.
He said police had arrested 125 drug traffickers in various parts of the Kingdom during the same period and seized 500,482 Captagon tablets, 644 kg of hashish, 4.55 kg of heroin and other narcotics.
Police also seized 76 pieces of weapons from smugglers, including 66 pistols, two machine guns and two rifles in addition to SR2 million in cash.
The smugglers tried to bring drugs into the Kingdom by hiding them inside cars, car engines, spare tires, pipes and fruit, and also inside their stomachs.
Drug abuse is a major problem facing Saudi Arabia. According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Saudi Arabia led the charts in the seizure of amphetamine-type stimulants in 1998-2007, accounting for 27 percent of all seizures.
Last April, Riyadh hosted an international conference to combat drug trafficking, which was attended by more than 480 experts from 26 countries.
Saudi officials say the drug trade is often linked with security problems and the government has become increasingly focused in its fight against drug trafficking culminating in many drug busts. Al-Turki said it was likely there was a link between the drug smugglers and Al-Qaeda, as the international terror organization uses drug trafficking to finance its operations.
Annemarie Profanter, an Italian professor at the Free University of Bozen who has researched drug trafficking in the Gulf with a focus on Saudi Arabia, said drug use among Saudi youth is on the rise. "In my studies, I have shown that the Saudi youth makes increasing use of nontraditional, maladaptive tools for societal integration including misuse of mind or mood altering substance such as street drugs (cocaine, heroin, cannabis etc.), alcohol, and prescription drugs (ridlin, oxyconton, seconal, etc.), which are haram," she told The Media Line.
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