Pubdate: Mon, 11 Jul 2005
Source: East African, The (Kenya)
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300 TANZANIAN DRUG TRAFFICKERS HELD IN FOREIGN JAILS

Some 330 Tanzanians are languishing in various jails worldwide for 
drug trafficking as the country appears unable to stem drug-related offences.

Over the past two years, at least 60 Tanzanians were arrested in 
foreign countries - including neighbouring Kenya and Uganda - for 
handling narcotic substances, with marijuana topping the list of most 
peddled drugs. Tanzania is the second largest marijuana producer in 
Africa, after South Africa.

National Commission for Control of Illicit Drugs and Narcotics head 
Christopher Shekiondo said efforts to clamp down on the production, 
trafficking and consumption of marijuana had failed to contain the 
outlawed trade.

Mr Shekiondo's frustration is echoed in a recent UN report showing 
that two per cent of all confiscated marijuana in the world in 2002 
was found in Tanzania. The country ranked fourth worldwide. Last 
year, over 281.5 hectares of cannabis was destroyed in the fields, 
while between 1997 and last year, over two million kilogrammes of 
bhang were confiscated and 37,264 suspected peddlers arrested. Mr Babu.

While the UN statistics indicate some major accomplishments in 
fighting the problem - with the confiscation of 90.4 tonnes of dried 
marijuana in 2002 - the report says the war against narcotics is far 
from being won.

Implying that Tanzania was a yardstick for the continent's war on 
drugs, the report says that Africa's share of global seizures 
increased from 10 per cent to 32 per cent, while the share of the 
Americas decreased from 80 per cent to 61 per cent. It appears there 
has been a global upsurge in demand for cannabis and a corresponding 
increase in supply, mainly from southern Africa - with Tanzania, 
Malawi, Lesotho, Swaziland and South Africa being the region's 
biggest producers.

Police in Arusha, Tanga and Kilimanjaro - where most of the marijuana 
plantations are found - admit that marijuana smugglers evade arrest 
by transporting the narcotic using coffins and donkeys to get through 
roadblocks.

Police say the growers have retreated to remote areas in Mount Meru, 
Kilimanjaro and Usambara where the roads are impassable, making it 
difficult to mount an effective campaign. A senior policeman in 
Arusha said some corrupt government officials were also working with 
drug barons.

They bribe junior police officers to transport marijuana in public 
service vans, with public servants accepting the risk as a way of 
supplementing their meagre salaries. Such officers earn a salary of 
$100 per month.

Arusha Regional Police Commander James Kombe says statistics showed 
that over 60 per cent of the annual production of marijuana finds its 
way across the borders to the South African market. Some of it ends 
up in Europe and America, he added.

The consumption of marijuana is also taking it toll on the 
population. Arusha Regional Commissioner Mohamed Babu says the 
country is fast joining the ranks of regions with large numbers of 
drug addicts.

Statistics at Arusha's Mount Meru Hospital show that from January to 
June, 78 people have been treated for drug addiction.

The situation is the same in Tanga, where dozens of youths are 
admitted at the main Bombo Hospital for drug-related illnesses. "Our 
sole mental asylum is already crowded with people who have almost 
become lunatics because of hemp," a Mount Meru hospital nurse told 
The EastAfrican last week.

Mr Kombe has vowed to eliminate marijuana plantations. His force has 
been using helicopters to patrol the areas.

"We will keep up the pressure until we eradicate all the fields here. 
We are keeping up our vigilance," he said.

UN data shows that Tanzania is fast becoming known for industrial drugs.
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