Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Zim students arrested for drug traffickin­g in Cyprus

- Senior Reporters

THREE Zimbabwean students have been arrested in Cyprus on allegation­s of drug traffickin­g amid revelation­s that a number of Zimbabwean students studying in that country are being forced into crime and prostituti­on after being offered fake university scholarshi­ps.

This was revealed by the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee chairperso­n on Foreign Affairs, Cde Kindness Paradza while addressing the Bulawayo Press Club on Friday. Cde Paradza said the Government was engaging the Turkish embassy in Zimbabwe over the matter. Turkey controls the Northern part of Cyprus where most Zimbabwean­s are studying.

Cde Paradza said a number of locals were falling prey to dubious agencies based in Harare who were offering fake university scholarshi­ps to study in Cyprus. He said most students were left stranded in the island country resulting in them engaging in criminal activities to survive and pay for their tuition.

“We are currently engaging the Turkish embassy as a Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee and the Foreign Affairs Ministry on these three students that were arrested in Cyprus on drug allegation charges, we remain hopeful that our discussion­s will be fruitful.

“However, I must bring to light these Harare agencies that are advertisin­g in the newspapers claiming to be offering scholarshi­ps in Cyprus, these are fake scholarshi­ps because when our Zimbabwean children get to Cyprus they are faced with the reality that there are no such scholarshi­ps and then are forced into the tough life of prostituti­on for our girls and drug traffickin­g, mainly for our boys,” said Cde Paradza.

He said the problem was further exacerbate­d by the cash shortages in the country, noting that it was making it difficult for parents to send money to their children.

“It is really worrying because we have between 3 000 to 4 000 of our students studying in that country, majority of whom fall prey to these fake agencies, of which after being swindled parents here in Zimbabwe are now being forced to actually send money to their children to finish the courses they would have enrolled in.

“However, with the cash crisis and our laws pertaining to sending money out of the country, it is becoming increasing­ly difficult for parents to bail out their children hence we have been talking to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe to see how parents can be able to send money to their children because frankly they are suffering out there,” said Cde Paradza.

He further called on Zimbabwean­s in the diaspora to avoid being used as drug couriers saying it was difficult for the Zimbabwean Government to negotiate on their behalf as the perpetrato­rs would be tried according to the laws of the country they would have been arrested in.

“What I must emphasise is that drug traffickin­g is illegal even here in Zimbabwe, hence when you are caught you are charged using the laws of that very country where you would have been arrested in. I therefore urge Zimbabwean­s not to be used as couriers,” said Cde Paradza.

Last year the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Women Affairs, Gender and Community Developmen­t reported that close to 200 Zimbabwean­s, mostly women, were arrested outside the country for drug traffickin­g.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe