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3 arrested after 131kg of ketamine disguised as sugar cubes found in air cargo

3 arrested after 131kg of ketamine disguised as sugar cubes found in air cargo
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3 arrested after 131kg of ketamine disguised as sugar cubes found in air cargo Hong Kong customs intercept cargo from Germany with help from mainland authorities and find pails containing drugs worth an estimated HK$51 million Hong Kong customs officers have arrested three men in connection with 131 kilograms (289 pounds) of suspected ketamine worth about HK$51 million (US$6.5 million), disguised as sugar cubes and found in air cargo transported to the city. Chiu Kai-wing, a senior...

3 arrested after 131kg of ketamine disguised as sugar cubes found in air cargo Hong Kong customs intercept cargo from Germany with help from mainland authorities and find pails containing drugs worth an estimated HK$51 million Hong Kong customs officers have arrested three men in connection with 131 kilograms (289 pounds) of suspected ketamine worth about HK$51 million (US$6.5 million), disguised as sugar cubes and found in air cargo transported to the city. Chiu Kai-wing, a senior investigator with the Customs and Excise Department’s drug investigation bureau, said on Saturday that officers had intercepted an air cargo consignment from Germany declared as containing sugar cubes on Tuesday, after exchanging intelligence with mainland Chinese authorities. “The syndicate exploited convenient logistics in the city, using a complicated and more expensive route to traffic drugs, in a bid to hide the goods’ origins and evade detection,” Chiu said. Customs officers discovered 131 kilograms of suspected ketamine in the form of white crystals inside 17 of 117 plastic pails declared as containing sugar cubes. The suspected illegal drugs had an estimated value of around HK$51.4 million. Chiu said that the use of air transport, which is more expensive than road or sea freight, for low-cost goods such as sugar had aroused suspicions. “The cargo had also gone through multiple transfers to lower transport costs and mask the goods’ origins, as well as to evade checks,” he explained. Tsui Kin-hei, an inspector with customs’ air cargo group, explained that officers detected the suspected ketamine inside three pallets of sealed pails after X-ray scans revealed anomalies.
Hong Kong (LOCATION) Germany (LOCATION) Chiu Kai- (PERSON) the Customs and Excise Department’s (ORG) Chinese (ORG) Chiu (PERSON) Customs (ORG) Tsui Kin-hei (PERSON)
Originally published by South China Morning Post Read original →