Nieuws volgens datum: 20 Mar, 2024

CANU seized 1.1 tonnes ganja, 75kg cocaine seized so far for 2024

Just under three months into 2024, the Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit (CANU) has seized a startling 1.1 tonnes of marijuana and over 75 kilograms of cocaine from various operations across the country.

 Director of CANU, James Singh spoke with media operatives on Monday, and gave this breakdown. A majority of the marijuana is from the Andean region of South America that includes Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela. “We have over 75 kilos of cocaine and close to 1.1 tonnes of marijuana. Of the marijuana, about 90 per cent is foreign marijuana that came from the Andean region, known as “Creepy”,” Singh informed. In contrast, CANU had seized approximately 1363.28 kilograms of narcotics over the course of 2023, and cannabis sativa (ganja) accounted for 94 per cent of the total seizure. From 18 operations conducted, 75.17 kilograms of cocaine were seized.

 Meanwhile, Singh also responded to recent concerns that the increase in seizures is an indication that drugs are coming into Guyana, as he reminded that Guyana was a transshipment point. Consequently, he encouraged persons to share information, which can lead to the dismantling of such operations. “A lot of the narcotics coming in is going to other regions, both marijuana and cocaine. And sometimes we rely not only on the press but the public to share information. All too often, we arrest persons and those representing them are saying ‘don’t say anything, remain silent’. You can expect me to do my job when you’re also supposed to be helping us but then you tell your client or other members don’t say anything.”

“It’s their right, but, at the same time, if you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem. So, we encourage as you guys just know, we encourage persons to call in and share information as opposed to saying don’t call, people will come after you. You have a right as a citizen to give information if it can help you live a safer life, safer community. After all, we’re looking at one safe Guyana,” the Director underscored.

 Currently, there are four extradition requests from other countries for persons, who were arrested here by CANU for involvement in drug trafficking, trade or other narcotics-related offences. However, Guyana is taking the lead to process these persons here through the judicial system before they are handed over to overseas counterparts. “We have persons arrested that the US had expressed interest in and that is still ongoing, because their matters are still ongoing here. Before anyone leaves Guyana, we will put them through the judicial process here and when we’re finished with them, whoever is interested, they can then apply for them. We have to demonstrate that we are doing this on our own, again with the support of our foreign counterparts, but persons must know what it is like to go to jail first here in Guyana,” he explained.

 For 2024, there were several notable busts which led to the interception of large quantities of drugs. Last month, more than 100 pounds of cocaine were discovered at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport (CJIA), for which Gavin Anthony McKie and Tyrone Hamilton were wanted for questioning. The latter turned himself in days later. However, his accomplice is still at large, according to Singh. “We’re still waiting on him to come in. We understand that he’s outside of Guyana. We’re working with our colleagues to try and arrest him,” he indicated.

 Initial reports indicated that CANU agents stationed at the CJIA observed two suspects retrieving four duffle bags thrown over the airport fence by an unidentified male. Upon interception, a search of the duffle bags led to the discovery of 64 brick-like parcels suspected to contain cocaine. The suspects, identified as 26-year-old Travis Sealey, a shift leader at New Timehri Handling Service (NTHS), and 20-year-old Koby Bakker, a ground security coordinator at Secure Innovations and Concepts (SIC), both residents of Timehri, EBD, were apprehended and escorted to CANU Headquarters, along with the suspected narcotics. Subsequent testing confirmed the presence of cocaine. The parcels weighed approximately 71.2 kilograms, with an estimated street value of $64,000,000 locally.

 CANU stated that the narcotics were intended for transport on a British Airways flight bound for St Lucia, with a subsequent connection to the United Kingdom. The potential street value of the seized narcotics had they reached their intended destination, was estimated at over £3,000,000, equivalent to approximately G$679,000,000.

 Ranks also recently made a major drug bust on the Essequibo Coast, Region Two when they unearthed 660 brick-like parcels of foreign marijuana, commonly known as “Creepy”. Reports are that the ranks found the drug at Fisher Village, Essequibo Coast after they observed a multi-coloured speedboat operated by two individuals. According to CANU, the ranks pursued the boat, causing the individuals to run aground, but they subsequently made good their escape on foot.

(InewsGuyana)…[+]

Levenslang voor moeder die dochter van zestien maanden tien dagen alleen thuis liet

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VS – De 32-jarige Ameri­kaanse vrouw uit Cleve­land die haar zestien maanden oude dochter tien dagen alleen thuis achterliet, moet levenslang de gevangenis in. Ze krijgt geen kans op vervroegde vrijlating, aldus rechter Brendan Sheehan van het County Common Pleas Court.

Kristel Candelario ging tien dagen op vakantie, maar liet haar kind thuis achter in de box zonder eten en drinken. Dit kostte dochtertje Jailyn haar leven. Rechter Sheehan velde een streng oordeel en sprak over “ultiem verraad”. “Net zoals je Jailyn niet uit haar gevangenschap hebt gehaald, zou jij ook de rest van je leven in een cel zonder vrijheid moeten doorbrengen. Het grote verschil is dat jij in de gevangenis wel kunt rekenen op eten en drinken, iets wat jij je eigen dochter hebt ontzegd.”

Candelario kampt met mentale problemen en dat haalde ze in de rechtbank ook aan. Ze beweert spijt van haar misdaad te hebben. “Het verlies van mijn baby Jailyn doet ontzettend veel pijn. Ik ben enorm aangedaan door alles wat er is gebeurd. Ik probeer mijn daden niet te rechtvaardigen, maar niemand wist hoeveel ik leed en wat ik doormaakte. God en mijn dochter hebben mij vergeven.”

 (De  Telegraaf)…[+]

Russia replaces navy chief sunk by Ukraine’s Black Sea campaign

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RUSSIA –  Russia has appointed Admiral Alexander Moiseyev as acting commander-in-chief of its navy after his predecessor was axed due to repeated hits on the Black Sea Fleet by Ukrainian attacks.

Moiseev, former commander of Russia’s Northern Fleet, was formally engaged in his new role at an official ceremony yesterday, according to the RIA Novosti news agency.

He replaces Admiral Nikolai Yevmenov. The 61-year-old had been in the post for nearly five years but was reportedly sacked after the losses of a string of warships.

The appointment of Moiseyev, also 61, marks the biggest shake-up in Russia’s military top brass since the sacking of aerospace force chief Sergey Surovikin last year.

 Born in Kaliningrad, he graduated from a film college in the western Russian enclave, but made his career in the navy, serving on nuclear submarines for more than 29 years.

 Ukrainian forces claim to have destroyed more than two dozen Russian ships since the conflict began in February 2022, In the most recent attack, a military patrol boat was sunk earlier this month.

 The losses have been an embarrassment for Moscow, which has been forced to move ships from the Black Sea Fleet’s historic naval base in occupied Crimea’s Sevastopol east to the port of Novorossiysk.

The maritime military woes come in stark contrast to Russia’s land offensive in east Ukraine, where its forces have advanced in recent months after over a year of deadlocked fighting.

(Al Jazeera)…[+]

Armenia’s PM warns Azerbaijan could start war over disputed border villages

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ARMENIA  –  Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said his country could face a war with neighbouring Azerbaijan if it does not compromise and return four Azerbaijani villages it has held since the early 1990s. In the video published yesterday, Pashinyan was speaking at a meeting with residents in northern Armenia’s Tavush region, close to a string of deserted Azerbaijani villages that Armenia has controlled since the early 1990s.

 The four villages, which have been uninhabited for more than 30 years, are of strategic value to Armenia as they straddle the main road between Yerevan and the Georgian border.

Azerbaijan has said the return of its lands, which also include several tiny enclaves entirely surrounded by Armenian territory, is a necessary condition for a peace deal to end three decades of conflict over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which Azerbaijan’s forces retook last September.

Pashinyan told locals, in the video clip that was circulated by his government, that failure to compromise over the villages could lead to war with Azerbaijan “by the end of the week”, Russian state news agency TASS reported.

“Now we can leave here, let’s go and tell [Azerbaijan] that no, we are not going to do anything. This means that at the end of the week a war will begin,” TASS quoted him as saying.

Armenia suffered a major defeat in September when Azerbaijan’s forces retook Nagorno-Karabakh in a lightning offensive, prompting almost all of that region’s estimated 100,000 ethnic Armenians to flee to Armenia.

Though Nagorno-Karabakh is recognised internationally as Azerbaijani territory, the region’s ethnic Armenians have enjoyed de facto independence from Azerbaijan since the war of the early 1990s.

Azerbaijan and Armenia have said they now want to sign a formal peace treaty, but talks have become bogged down in issues including the demarcation of their 1,000km (620 mile) shared border, which remains closed and heavily militarised.

Pashinyan has signalled in recent weeks that he is willing to return Azerbaijani land controlled by Armenia, and suggested rerouting Armenia’s road network to avoid Azerbaijani territory.

Muslim-majority Azerbaijan also continues to control areas internationally recognised as part of Christian-majority Armenia.

 Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev said on Sunday his country was “closer than ever” to peace with Armenia, in remarks made after holding talks with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg in Baku. Stoltenberg held talks yesterday with Pashinyan in Armenia, which is nominally a Russian ally though its relations with Moscow have deteriorated in recent months over what Armenia says is Russia’s failure to protect it from Azerbaijan.

As a result, Armenia has pivoted its foreign policy towards the West, to Russia’s chagrin, with senior officials suggesting it might one day apply for European Union membership.

Speaking at a news conference in Yerevan with Pashinyan, Stoltenberg welcomed what he called Armenia’s solidarity with Ukraine.

Commenting on Stoltenberg’s visit, the Kremlin said the bloc’s efforts to expand there were unlikely to help bring stability.

 In a statement posted yesterday on the Telegram messaging app, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova suggested Armenia’s deepening ties with the West were the reason for it having to make concessions to Azerbaijan.

(Al Jazeera)…[+]