Feb 21, 2011
KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian police said Tuesday they have dented a major drugs syndicate with the arrest of two Iranian women with over 6.2 kilograms of methamphetamine on a resort island.
Northern Penang state police chief Ayub Yaakob told AFP the women were arrested on Saturday at Penang international airport after their suitcases were found containing drugs worth 1.55 million ringgit (510,793 dollars).
"We became suspicious about the women as they had traveled to Malaysia three times in less than three months and they did not have any business dealings or any other reason to keep them coming back so frequently," he said.
"The two Iranian women, we believe, are part of one of the region's biggest syndicates which is trying to use Malaysia as a transhipment point for its drug and it has been dealt a significant blow with this arrest," he added.
However, Ayub said police would not be releasing any more details on the arrests as investigations were ongoing and could lead to further arrests.
Iran's ambassador in Kuala Lumpur has said international crime gangs are using Iranians to smuggle drugs into Malaysia.
Last month, a suspected Iranian drug trafficker died in a Malaysian hospital after 137 capsules of methamphetamine -- also known as crystal meth -- broke open in his stomach.
There has been a steep increase in the number of Iranian suspected drug traffickers caught in Malaysia, with 138 arrested from January to October last year compared with 16 in the whole of 2009.
Police have said that many of the drugs are destined for export to China, the Philippines and other neighboring countries.
Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved.
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