The Borneo Post

Bangladesh arrests three Rohingya with 800,000 meth pills

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COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh: Bangladesh police yesterday arrested three Rohingya men and a Bangladesh­i who were trying to smuggle 800,000 methamphet­amine pills into the country from Myanmar, an official said.

The arrests come as Bangladesh struggles to deal with a massive influx of Rohingya Muslims fleeing unrest in neighbouri­ng Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

Officers from Bangladesh’s elite Rapid Action Battalion ( RAB) detained the four men on a fishing trawler in the estuary of the Naf river, which divides the two countries.

“We caught four people traffickin­g Yaba tablets. Three of them are Rohingya from Myanmar and the other one is a Bangladesh­i,” Major Ruhul Amin, an RAB area commander, told AFP.

“They were carrying 800,000 yaba tablets on a boat. They brought the yabas from Myanmar. Two of the Rohingyas came here recently. And the other one is an old refugee,” he added.

Yaba, a Thai word meaning ‘crazy medicine’, is a concoction of methamphet­amine and caffeine that has become popular among young people in Bangladesh.

Some 480,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled violence in Rakhine since Aug 25 and taken refuge in Bangladesh’s southeaste­rn district of Cox’s Bazar.

The influx began when deadly attacks by Rohingya militants on Myanmar police posts prompted a huge crackdown by the military.

In recent years Bangladesh­i security forces have seized millions of yaba tablets from trafficker­s attempting to enter Cox’s Bazar by land and sea.

Last week two Rohingya men were arrested from a boat in the Naf river by Bangladesh border guards with some 430,000 yaba pills.

Last year, a Bangladesh counternar­cotics official told AFP the country was struggling to shut down traffickin­g from Myanmar, in part because it is difficult to patrol the vast Naf river.

He said yaba pills were being produced in bathroom-sized labs in border areas in Myanmar. — AFP

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