Bangkok Post

Family says daughter ‘set up’

Australian arrested in Colombia for cocaine

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BOGOTA: The family of an Australian woman arrested in Colombia for trying to board a flight with almost 6kg of cocaine is mounting a campaign to defend her against what they consider trumpedup charges.

Cassandra Sainsbury was arrested April 12 at Bogota’s internatio­nal airport after an X-ray machine detected the cocaine hidden in 18 different packages stashed in her luggage. The 22-year-old was preparing to board a flight to London on her way back to Australia.

Her family contends she was set up, but Colombian police said her arrest was undistingu­ishable from a growing number of drug cases involving foreigners.

The case has garnered media attention in Australia and her family has raised almost $2,000 online to fund her defence.

“Our hearts break, because we know she is innocent, but stands little chance of proving it in such a corrupt country,” her sister Khala Sainsbury said in an online post.

Khala said her sister, a personal trainer and volunteer firefighte­r, was in Colombia on a working holiday. She told The Australian newspaper that while in Colombia, her sister went with a male friend she met before travelling to South America to buy headphones for her upcoming wedding party. The merchandis­e was purchased from a contact in a pre-wrapped package, her sister said.

“He had been helping her all week, taking her around and showing her places and just being a nice guy,” her mother Lisa told KIIS FM commercial radio. “Whether he was just using her as bait and there was another big shipment trying to go through ... so she would get caught, I just don’t know.”

Lt Col Jorge Triana, head of the antinarcot­ics police at Bogota’s internatio­nal airport, said Cassandra’s claims that she was deceived are probably untrue and in any case don’t excuse her actions.

“Everyone who is caught says exactly the same thing,” said Lt Col Triana, who added that many foreigners are lured by false promises of fast fortunes. “But they know what they’re doing.”

Colombia is the world’s largest producer of cocaine and its police among the best-trained to detect and stop drug smuggling thanks in part to billions of dollars in US anti-narcotics aid that has strengthen­ed law enforcemen­t.

As tourism to Colombia has boomed over the past decade, the country’s drug cartels are increasing­ly recruiting foreigners to smuggle cocaine out of the country. Police have arrested 19 foreign drug mules this year alone, Lt Col Triana said.

Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed an Australian woman had been arrested in Colombia and it was providing assistance, without giving more details.

The family have begun an online campaign to help cover legal fees, which has raised AU$2,600 (67,000 baht) in four days.

Khala said Cassandra was being held at the overcrowde­d El Buen Pastor jail after being denied bail. “Cassie is possibly facing 20-25 years in prison for a crime she did not commit. Our hearts break, because we know she is innocent,” she said on a fundraisin­g site. Colombia is the world’s top producer of coca leaf, from which cocaine is made.

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