Tag: narcotics

  • Dramatic CNB Drug Bust In Boon Lay

    Dramatic CNB Drug Bust In Boon Lay

    Stompers Emily and Jurong resident thought that they were looking at an accident scene at Boon Lay Way at around 5.50pm yesterday (May 01).

    But what they both saw was the aftermath of a Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) drug bust.

    According to Emily, the accident involved a Honda Civic and Hyundai Getz.

    Stomper Jurong Resident told Stomp that she had heard a loud thud from her flat and noticed that a blue car had crashed into the road divider.

    In a phone interview with Stomp, the Stomper said:

    “I saw a blue car crash into the middle fence, strangely in the opposite direction. The driver of the blue car immediately opened the door and started running.

    “Then four men from the grey vehicles ran out of the car and started chasing the man. They managed to catch him and dragged him back and put him into one of the grey cars.”

    Here is the CNB statement which sheds light on the incident:

    “Earlier this evening (May 01), a 26-year-old suspected male drug trafficker who was trying to evade arrest, crashed his car into CNB Officers’ vehicle along Boon Lay Way, before hitting a member of public’s car.

    “Both the suspect and the family of four in that car were sent to the hospital for checks.

    “The suspect was related to an earlier case on 30 Apr 2015 where about 312 gm of heroin and 3 Erimin-5 tablets were found in a car.

    “Suspect is now under CNB’s custody and will be investigated for drug trafficking.”

     

    Source: http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg

  • Future Music Festival Asia 2015 Cancelled

    Future Music Festival Asia 2015 Cancelled

    SINGAPORE – The Future Music Festival Asia 2015 will be officially cancelled and festival-goers will receive refunds, said organisers on Sunday.

    In a post on their Facebook page, the group apologised to festival-goers for the “inconvenience (they) have been put through” and said details on the refund would be made available on Monday.

    Festival organiser Livescape had twice applied for and failed to secure a public entertainment license from the authorities here. Livescape then submitted an appeal to the Minister for Home Affairs on March 3, but that was rejected too.

    About 15,000 tickets have been sold for the event, which was scheduled to be held for the first time in Singapore at the Changi Exhibition Centre on Friday and Saturday, March 13 to 14. Big acts such as Public Enemy and The Prodigy were slated to perform.

    Started in Australia in 2006 and considered one of the biggest dance music festivals in South-east Asia, the event made headlines last year when six of its concert-goers died from drug overdose in Kuala Lumpur.

    Tickets to the festival in Singapore, which cost between $148 and $388, were sold via Sistic, as well as on the festival’s website.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com and www.futuremusicfestival.asia

  • Indonesia Transfers 7 Foreign Convicted Drug Smugglers To Prison Island To Be Executed

    Indonesia Transfers 7 Foreign Convicted Drug Smugglers To Prison Island To Be Executed

    JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Eight convicted drug smugglers, including seven foreigners, will be transferred to an Indonesian prison island this week for imminent execution despite international appeals for clemency, an official said Monday.

    Among the eight are Andrew Chan, 31, and Myuran Sukumaran, 33, the ringleaders of a group of nine Australians arrested in 2005 for attempting to smuggle 8.3 kilograms (18.3 pounds) of heroin to Australia from the Indonesian resort island of Bali. The seven other members of the group — dubbed the “Bali Nine” by Australian media — have received prison sentences ranging from 20 years to life.

    In addition to Chan and Sukumaran, five men from France, Brazil, Ghana, Nigeria and Indonesia, and a woman from the Philippines, will face a firing squad after being moved to Nusa Kambangan prison, Attorney General’s Office spokesman Tony Spontana said, without giving exact dates. Six other drug smugglers, including five foreigners, were executed in January at the same prison, located off Indonesia’s main island of Java.

    Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has rejected appeals by Australia’s government for clemency for Chan and Sukumaran, and vowed not to grant mercy to any other drug offenders because Indonesia is suffering a “drug emergency.”

    Australia has abolished capital punishment and opposes executions of any Australian overseas.

    Lawyers for the two Australians, who are currently being held at a Bali prison, filed a complaint in an administrative court last week to challenge Jokowi’s rejection of the appeals, arguing that it was made without consideration of their remorse and rehabilitation. A hearing on the complaint is scheduled for next week.

    Spontana, however, said the executions would not be delayed. “Their legal options were exhausted after their clemency was rejected by the president,” he said. “The next step is execution.”

    In Australia earlier Monday, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said he had personally appealed to Jokowi to stop the executions.

    “Like millions of Australians, I feel sick in the pit of my stomach when I think about what is quite possibly happening to these youngsters,” he told reporters.

    Abbott said his government has been trying to appeal to Indonesia’s sense of itself as a stable democracy under the rule of law.

    “What I don’t want to do is turn this into some kind of test of strength,” he said. “I think we are much more likely to back the Indonesians into a corner than to get the result we want.”

    Six former Australian prime ministers on Monday added their voices to calls to spare the Australians.

    Former prime ministers Malcolm Fraser, Bob Hawke, Paul Keating, John Howard, Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard issued statements in support of the pair published in The Australian national newspaper on Tuesday.

    “As a deep, long-standing friend of Indonesia, I would respectfully request an act of clemency,” wrote Rudd, who was prime minister from 2007 until 2010, then again in 2013.

    “Mercy being shown in such circumstances would not weaken the deterrent effect of Indonesia’s strong anti-drug laws,” wrote Howard, who was prime minister from 1996 until 2007.

    Indonesian Foreign Ministry officials met with embassy representatives from the foreign death row inmates’ countries Monday to discuss the executions. The representatives and the Indonesian officials declined to talk to the media after the meeting.

    United Nations human rights experts have expressed concern at reports indicating trials for some of the defendants did not meet international standards of fairness and have called for an immediate halt to further executions in Indonesia.

    Indonesia has extremely strict drug laws. On Jan. 18, it executed six drug convicts by firing squad, including foreigners from Brazil, Malawi, Nigeria, the Netherlands and Vietnam, brushing aside last-minute appeals by foreign leaders.

    There are 133 people on death row in Indonesia, including 57 for drug crimes and two convicted terrorists.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Cannabis Worth $33,000 Found In Car Engine Compartment At Woodlands Checkpoint

    Cannabis Worth $33,000 Found In Car Engine Compartment At Woodlands Checkpoint

    SINGAPORE – About 1kg of cannabis was seized by immigration officials, and a suspected smuggler arrested at the Woodlands checkpoint on Saturday, Nov 22.

    A routine check on a Malaysia-registered car had turned up a block of the suspected cannabis in the engine compartment.

    The Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) was alerted at 1.05pm on Saturday.

    The driver of the car, a 37-year-old Malaysian man, was arrested, CNB said in a statement on Sunday.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • CNB Busts Estimated $200,000 Worth of Drugs

    CNB Busts Estimated $200,000 Worth of Drugs

    SINGAPORE: More than S$200,000 worth of drugs – 1.9kg of heroin, 1kg of cannabis and 198g of Ice – were seized by the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) in two separate operations on Wednesday (Nov 5).

    CNB said on Thursday that officers deployed in Clementi spotted a 28-year-old suspect arriving at a housing block in a Malaysia-registered motorcycle on Wednesday morning. The Malaysian, according to CNB officers, was seen taking a plastic bag from his vehicle before proceeding to a unit in the housing block.

    CNB said he was arrested after he was seen coming down the block without the bag. When officers went up to the unit the suspect visited, a female suspect was also arrested for attempting to flush the drugs down the toilet. The 42-year-old Singaporean had drugs comprising about 1.28kg of heroin, 1,034g of cannabis, 95g of Ice and one Erimin-5 tablet in her apartment, the agency said.

    CNB added that another two male Malaysians – both aged 40 – were arrested when they tried to leave Singapore in a Malaysia-registered lorry on Wednesday afternoon. They were suspected to be involved in the same drug trafficking syndicate, CNB said.

    In a separate operation, CNB officers alongside Singapore Police Force (SPF) officers arrested another suspected drug trafficker at a HDB void deck in Tampines Street 81. CNB said the 42-year-old Singaporean was then escorted back to his suspected hideout where about 270g of heroin and 51g of Ice were recovered.

    In a subsequent search, CNB said another 416g of heroin and 52g of Ice were also recovered from his apartment. Drug paraphernalia such as numerous improvised drug-smoking apparatus and digital weighing scales were recovered too, the agency added.

    Investigations on all the suspects are ongoing. If convicted, they may face the death penalty.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com