Nigerian Pilgrims Cleared Of Drug Trafficking In Saudi Arabia

Two pilgrims from Kwara state that were recently arrested by the Saudi Arabian authorities for being in possession of substance suspected to be cocaine have been released.

The National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON), confirmed their release in a recent statement in Abuja.

The statement added that the arrested pilgrims from the State were released following investigation that they were not guilty of the offence.

Though residents of Kwara, whose relatives are performing this year Hajj exercise have been worried, the identities of the affected pilgrims are yet to be disclosed.

According to the statement from the Kingdom, “the two suspects were set free after it was discovered that the allegation for which they were arrested was false.

It would be recalled that two Nigerian pilgrims from Kwara State were arrested on August 9 and 12 over alleged trafficking of drugs into Saudi Arabia.

Credit: NAN

3 Nigerian Pilgrims Arrested In Saudi For Drug Trafficking

The Saudi Arabian authorities have arrested three Nigerians for alleged possession of substance suspected to be cocaine.
According to NAN, the three suspects were in the country for the Hajj exercise. The Executive Secretary, Kwara Muslim Pilgrims Welfare Board, Hajia Fatima Abolore-Jimoh confirmed the arrest yesterday from Saudi Arabia in a telephone interview. She said the three pilgrims, who were among the first batch of 505 Pilgrims from Kwara State, were arrested in Madinnah by Saudi Arabia security operatives.
Hajia Fatima Abolore-Jimoh, who did not disclose the identities of the three suspects, said they were still in the custody of Saudi Arabian authorities as at the time of filing this report.
She said the Saudi Arabian law would certainly take its course on the three suspected drug traffickers. She described the arrest as unfortunate and painful in spite of several appeals to them to be good ambassadors of Kwara and Nigeria. Saudi Arabia has one of the toughest law on drug trafficking as the crime is punishable by beheading.
The executive secretary said that other pilgrims from the state were still in Madinnah, hale, healthy and in good spirit in spite of the unfortunate incident. 1 978 pilgrims from the state are performing the 2016 pilgrimage exercise.

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Indonesia Convicts Sang Praises To God Before Execution – Witnesses

As they walked to face the firing squad on an Indonesian prison island, eight condemned drug traffickers defiantly sang praise to God, witnesses said, while in a town across the water a group of tearful supporters was also uniting in song. Read more as reported by the AFP:

The convicts — two from Australia, one from Brazil, four from Africa and one Indonesian — made the long journey from their prison to clearings on a prison island to meet their fate early Wednesday. But rather than bow their heads in defeat and resignation, the convicts all reportedly refused blindfolds and raised their voices in song, including a rendition of “Amazing Grace”, until the gunfire from the firing squads rang out.

The husband of Pastor Christie Buckingham, who gave spiritual guidance to one of the Australians in his final moments, said his wife told him the men conducted themselves with “dignity and strength until the end”. “She told me the eight of them walked out onto the killing field singing songs of praise,” Rob Buckingham told 3AW radio in Australia.

Across the water in the town of Cilacap, the final crossing point for inmates destined for death on the high-security Nusakambangan island, a small band of mourners held a candlelight vigil, and also sang “Amazing Grace”. The haunting sounds filled the night sky, drowning out the sobs of those too distressed to contemplate what was taking place in the jungle-clad hills of the prison island. One man wailed loudly and implored Indonesian President Joko Widodo to have mercy. Another supporter read out the names of each inmate one by one.

Saudi Arabia Beheads Man for Drug Trafficking

Saudi Arabia has beheaded a Turkish man convicted of drug trafficking, amid rising concerns about the growing number of executions in the country.

The man known as Ali Agridas was executed in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, on Thursday, the Interior Ministry said in a statement. Agridas had been sentenced to death after being convicted of receiving a “large amount of drugs,” the ministry noted.

His execution brings to 70 the number of people beheaded in the kingdom so far this year. Saudi Arabia, with one of the highest rates of executions in the world, has frequently been criticized by human rights organizations.

Saudi Arabia carries out capital punishment mostly by beheading. Rape, murder, apostasy, armed robbery and drug trafficking are all punishable by death under the Saudi rule.

Credit: Press Tv

Cocaine Found in Bananas… Spain Detains Traffickers

Spanish police said Wednesday they had arrested nine people, including one of the country’s biggest drug smugglers, after finding cocaine hidden among a shipment of bananas from Colombia.

The authorities said they opened their investigation after police with sniffer dogs uncovered 54 kilos (120 pounds) of high quality cocaine hidden inside boxes of bananas as they were being unloaded at the port of Marin in the northwestern region of Galicia.

Officers arrested six people who came to pick up the cocaine as well as three others in the southern town of Dilar who were allegedly part of the ring that organised the shipment, a statement said.

The detainees included the leader of the drug smuggling ring, identified only as Antonio Manuel B.I., a Spanish national described by police as “one of Spain’s top drug dealers”.

Police said the suspect had been on the run since being sentenced to 17 years in jail in 2006 for drug smuggling and other crimes.

He was detained in Spain in 2001 on suspicion of being part of a ring trying to smuggle more than 1,000 kilos of cocaine out of Colombia.

Read More: http://news.yahoo.com