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UK: 'Dagga' brings riches to new drug barons

Tony Thompson, crime correspondent

The Observer

Sunday 02 Nov 2003

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South African cannabis now dominates illegal trade

A new generation of young British drug barons are becoming overnight
millionaires by importing high-quality cannabis direct from South Africa.

The gangs are taking advantage of the rock-bottom price of the South
African product - known locally as dagga - to enjoy profit margins as high
as 4,000 per cent and police are warning that those behind the trade could
become richer and more powerful than those trafficking cocaine and heroin.

Cannabis from South Africa and neighbouring countries is some of the most
potent in the world and now accounts for the vast majority of seizures in
the UK.

In Britain, high quality 'skunk' cannabis sells for around £3,500 a kilo.
In South Africa the same product can be bought for £20 a kilo, less if
bought in bulk. In some areas, dagga is said to be on sale for only 40p a kilo.

The rapid growth of the market is creating overnight multi-millionaires who
invest their new-found wealth in other areas of criminality.

Last week MPs voted to approve proposals to downgrade cannabis from Class B
to Class C. The move, which is intended to allow police to focus attention
on cocaine and heroin, is expected to increase demand for the drug, now
smoked regularly by more than three million Britons. Although penalties for
trafficking cannabis will be increased, they will be considerably lower
than those for Class A drugs.

Those running the trade rely on a network of couriers to bring
suitcase-sized loads of the drug to the UK, often via France, Germany and
in particular Ireland.

Over the past year at least 100 South African couriers have been detained
at Dublin International Airport, leading one judge, Patrick McCartan, to
declare the situation 'out of control'. During the summer, eight out of 10
drug smugglers arrested in Dublin were South African.

The gangs have now switched tactics and are flying into other airports.
Customs officials at Birmingham have dealt with a string of cases of South
African couriers in recent months. Authorities in South Africa have also
seized shipments bound for the West Midlands.

Most of the mules are white Afrikaaners who have fallen on hard times. They
are given a plane ticket and paid around £500 to carry a suitcase holding
up to 25 kilos of marijuana. The drugs are wrapped in plastic and covered
in coffee and carbon paper to avoid detection. The couriers, usually women,
are given telephone numbers to call on arrival in Dublin and then get
tickets to complete their journeys to the UK.

One police source told The Observer: 'A lot of what is going on involves
testing out routes. Because the amount of money invested is low, the
traffickers can afford to lose a shipment or two. The average amount the
couriers carry is 25 kilos. That costs £500, but is worth £75,000 in
the UK.'

Interpol now rates South Africa as the fourth-largest cannabis producer in
the world. Around a quarter of worldwide seizures involve South African
cannabis. The trend is confirmed by a a report by the Institute for
Security Studies in Cape Town, which says that most of the marijuana seized
in the UK, and a third of that seized globally, is now of South African origin.

A spokeswoman for the National Criminal Intelligence Service told The
Observer: 'This is an area of particular interest to us, as criminals who
make money from trafficking cannabis may use the profits to fund other
criminal activity. In addition, a consignment of cannabis may well include
Class A drugs.'

The potential for vast profit from South African cannabis was highlighted
last week when five members of a gang led by unemployed 24-year-old Robert
Beal were jailed for varying terms totalling 30 years.

Beal was arrested at a north London flat along with two South African
accomplices, businessmen Aaron Reichlin, 53, and 40-year-old Katiso Molefe,
when police carried out a search in connection with a robbery. They found
25,000 ecstasy pills, 5.2 kilos of cannabis and a cache of firearms,
including a sub-machine gun and two semi-automatic pistols.

They also found details of a shipment of two electrical transformers from
South Africa which were awaiting collection in Ipswich. When police
searched the transformer units at the dockyard they found 825 kilos of high
quality herbal cannabis. They resealed the empty containers and put them
under surveillance as they were taken to an industrial estate in Wembley,
north-west London, where police arrested the three other gang members.

Beal had paid £65,000 for the cannabis concealed in the transformer
units. In the UK, its value was £4.5 million.

 

 

 

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