Million Dollar Drug Smuggling Suspect Released To Flee Maldives

by BadrNaseem | August 9, 2008 at 09:11 pm
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Million Dollar Drug Smuggling Suspect Released To Flee Maldives

Million Dollar Drug Smuggling Suspect Released To Flee Maldives

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Sri Lankan citizen Sameen Ummul Fahumiyya, 56, arrested in March in connection with a drug bust worth over US $1 million, has returned to Sri Lanka after being released before her trial, police have confirmed.

A judge authorised the release of the suspected drug dealer on 18 June because there was “nowhere to detain her,” and her passport was then returned to her along with the rest of her belongings.

Human rights lawyer Husnu Suood described her release as “wrong”.

It is the second time in a month a judge has authorised that suspects in a serious criminal case be released from police custody. Three prime suspects in the December murder of Ali Ishar, 21, were downgraded to house arrest in June.

Released

Fahumiyya’s trial for drug dealing – which carries a 25-year sentence in the Maldives – was due to start on 17 July.

But she failed to appear, with her lawyer Abdullah Shaairu saying she had left the country.

Police confirmed Fahumiyya had been released after a judge ruled against extending her detention on 18 June, on the basis there was nowhere to keep her.

For a suspect to be kept in police custody after seven days, a judge must authorise the extension. Drug traffickers and those who “may run away” are among the categories of detainee who can be held beyond seven days.

Fahumiyya and Mohamed Wasood Mohamed Bisthaami, 38, had been caught on 13 March after bags of heroin were discovered in false compartments in their luggage as they entered the Maldives at Malé International Airport.

Police also arrested a Maldivian man, Abdul Waheed, shortly afterwards in connection with the incident. Bisthaami and Waheed have not been released.

“Wrong”

Prominent human rights lawyer and Seenu (Addu) atoll MP Husnu Suood spoke out against the move, saying: “She was aiding in the trafficking of drugs...The judgment is wrong. There is evidence against her.”

He added, “If there was no place for her detention, why were the others able to be detained?”

Director general at the attorney general’s office Hussein Shameem told Haveeru the passports of suspects in drug trafficking cases would usually be confiscated.

Police have also faced criticism for the release from police custody of three prime suspects in the December gang-related murder of Ali Ishar, 21.

Prime suspects Hussein Razeen (Rabarey), Shifaullah Abdul Waheed (Shifa) and Mohamed Ahusan (Ahu) were downgraded to house arrest in June, a move condemned by Ishar’s family.

Drugs Haul

The two Sri Lankans were travelling from Colombo, Sri Lanka, to Malé when they were caught on 13 March. But police say they believe the narcotics originated in Pakistan.

Their passports showed they had recently travelled from Colombo to Islamabad, in Pakistan, and then back to Colombo via Dubai.

The Maldives Customs Service said the four kilograms seized was the largest amount of narcotics they ever intercepted in a single haul, though 13.8 kilograms of heroin were found in a Malé apartment in March.

Police reported the four kilograms of heroin were worth Rf 12 million (USD 1 million).

The market for illegal drugs in the Maldives is worth approximately two million rufiyaa (US$157,000) a day, the national narcotics control bureau (NNCB) has previously said.

Ten to twelve thousand Maldivians are said by the National Narcotics Control Bureau (NNCB) to use illegal drugs, though other estimates range as high as 30,000.
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Barry Artiste
Barry Artiste
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:08 on August 10th, 2008

BadrNaseem, I like this story. It's good stuff. Guess Sri Lanka must have the same Law Books our Judges here in British Columbia have, or perhaps there was a Judicial  Foreign exchange program?

0
Barry Artiste

Ahaha, hey someone across the world agrees with me, perhaps you and I were separated at birth, Brother~

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