Malindi buying coke

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Malindi buying coke

A new report has shown that Kenya is a popular point and route for the smuggling of cocaine in the region. It notes that Kenya is a popular country for the landing and onward transnational transport of cocaine from South America, through Brazil, to and through the region. The report also says that Malaba is a significant smuggling transit point of smaller consignments of the drug from the Coast to international transit locations through Kampala, and Kigali in Rwanda, as well as northward to Juba and Addis Ababa. Illegal drug use and trafficking have continued along the Coastal towns including Mombasa, Malindi and Lamu despite proclamations by top government officials of stringent efforts to fight the vice. In Mombasa, officials say that rehab centres are overwhelmed by addicts and the rate of relapse for those who successfully recover is high. In fact, politics and crime are so interlinked they can appear to be inseparable. Previous drug seizures in Coast have revealed the involvement of state and security agencies in the lucrative enterprise with some officials who get in the way either transferred or killed. The report found that large volumes of cocaine are moving to and through the region by containerised shipments, general maritime cargo vessel shipments and micro-trafficking initiatives by air and by sea. Ad Slot. News 21 December - Coast police chiefs inspect sachets of heroin and cocaine at regional police headquarters in Mombasa, on August 25, A new report has shown that Kenya is a popular point and route for the smuggling of cocaine in the region. Eligh notes that the use of illegal drugs increased as the transit points gained prominence. All rights reserved.

Kenya’s Drug Barons

Malindi buying coke

Just a few minutes walk from the winding picturesque alleyways of Zanzibar's historic and much-visited Stone Town is a sight that most tourists will not get to see. Tourists come from Europe to sample cheap heroin and cocaine Crouching in small fishing boats and dugout canoes on the shore of Malindi, Stone Town's port are a number of young men injecting themselves with a cocktail of heroin and cocaine. It is a scene at odds with Zanzibar's image of an exotic beach paradise for well-heeled tourists, but for a growing number of Zanzibaris this is the reality of life on an impoverished island off the coast of Tanzania. Saluum Ibrahim Jiddawi started taking drugs when he was just 15 years old. His reasons for doing so were probably no different from teenagers anywhere in the world; he thought it was cool, his friends were doing it, he was bored at school. Wasted life And his life unravelled along predictable lines. I wasted 15 years of my life, and I regret all the pain I put my family through Saluum Jiddawi Ex-heroin user Saluum managed to kick the habit two years ago and now runs an outboard motor repair shop on the Malindi shoreline where addicts remind him on a daily basis of the 'biggest mistake' of his life. Saluum was lucky to get out of the drugs scene when he did as the temptation of drugs on the island is as strong as it has ever been. Spread of HIV And now addicts are adopting a new technique which is worrying drug abuse specialists. Young men inject themselves with a cocktail of heroin and cocaine It is called 'flash blood'. A user injects heroin, then withdraws a syringe-full of blood which contains a smaller amount of heroin and which is passed to a second user who injects it. The technique means that addicts who cannot afford to buy their own drugs can still get a fix, however diluted. If the first person is infected the second person will get a direct transmission of the virus. Drug-fuelled paradise? Young people do not know what they are doing. We believe every household in the urban centres has one or two children affected Mgeni Hassan Zanzibari ngo worker 'We are seeing the effects of drug abuse, the increase in crime. We believe every household in the urban centres has one or two children affected. One hotelier, who wants to remain anonymous, said he had met tourists who came from Europe to sample cheap heroin and cocaine. One recent case involving a British tourist ended in tragedy. A year-old man collapsed and died after taking drugs he had bought on the island. Most tourists will, of course, enjoy drug free holidays in Zanzibar and will not be aware of the growing local addiction problem. The authorities on the island are no doubt hoping that Zanzibar never picks up a reputation as a drug-fuelled paradise. Most Popular Now 56, people are reading stories on the site right now. Home Explore the BBC. Low graphics Accessibility help. News services Your news when you want it. News Front Page. E-mail this to a friend Printable version. Tourists come from Europe to sample cheap heroin and cocaine. I wasted 15 years of my life, and I regret all the pain I put my family through. Young men inject themselves with a cocktail of heroin and cocaine. Ghost town. The guerilla plant. Walking away. BBC Copyright Notice. Explore the BBC. Printable version. Zanzibar: A drug-fuelled paradise? I wasted 15 years of my life, and I regret all the pain I put my family through Saluum Jiddawi Ex-heroin user. We believe every household in the urban centres has one or two children affected Mgeni Hassan Zanzibari ngo worker. E-mail this to a friend. The guerilla plant How the world's oldest clove tree defied an empire.

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