Damascus Seizes 50,000 Captagon Pills Bound for Saudi Arabia

Captagon dealers arrested in Damascus; pills destined for smuggling to Saudi Arabia (Syrian Interior Ministry)
Captagon dealers arrested in Damascus; pills destined for smuggling to Saudi Arabia (Syrian Interior Ministry)
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Damascus Seizes 50,000 Captagon Pills Bound for Saudi Arabia

Captagon dealers arrested in Damascus; pills destined for smuggling to Saudi Arabia (Syrian Interior Ministry)
Captagon dealers arrested in Damascus; pills destined for smuggling to Saudi Arabia (Syrian Interior Ministry)

Syrian officials have confiscated 50,000 Captagon pills hidden in fabric cushions in Damascus's Al-Qadam district.
The Drug Enforcement Branch of Damascus made the discovery, according to a statement from the Syrian Interior Ministry shared on social media.
The pills were meant to be smuggled into Saudi Arabia, the ministry reported.
Three people have been arrested in connection with the case, and they will face legal action after being presented to competent judicial authorities.
Brig. Gen. Sami Darwish reported that one suspect was caught with the drugs and confessed to working with two other accomplices. These accomplices were later arrested in Jaramana and Al-Marja.
Hours before the Captagon seizure, the Damascus Criminal Security Branch arrested members of a network involved in drug trafficking and counterfeit currency.
The Interior Ministry said the arrests followed a thorough investigation and surveillance operation.
In a well-coordinated sting in the Al-Zahira district, three suspects were detained while traveling in a public vehicle.
Authorities seized 41 bundles of hashish and $1,000 in counterfeit bills. The suspects admitted to running a drug trafficking ring and distributing narcotics across provinces with the help of several accomplices who remain at large.
In Damascus’ Keshkoul area, three suspects were arrested with a firearm, Captagon pills, and a motorcycle. Police also found about 7,000 Tramadol pills at their homes. The search for additional suspects is ongoing.
The fight against drug trafficking is a major concern for Arab nations, along with refugee returns and political solutions.
Over the past two years, Syria has prevented several drug smuggling attempts, but the US and Western countries accuse the Syrian government of aiding drug trafficking, which they say threatens regional security.
Damascus has rejected claims of involvement in Captagon production and trafficking, citing its commitment to international drug control agreements, including the 1961 Convention, the 1971 Psychotropic Substances Convention, and the 1988 UN Convention on Drug Trafficking.

 



Oil Tanker Loading Crude at Libya’s Brega Port, Engineers Say

 A view of pipelines and a loading berth of the Marsa al Hariga oil port in the city of Tobruk, east of Tripoli, Libya, Aug. 20, 2013. (Reuters)
A view of pipelines and a loading berth of the Marsa al Hariga oil port in the city of Tobruk, east of Tripoli, Libya, Aug. 20, 2013. (Reuters)
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Oil Tanker Loading Crude at Libya’s Brega Port, Engineers Say

 A view of pipelines and a loading berth of the Marsa al Hariga oil port in the city of Tobruk, east of Tripoli, Libya, Aug. 20, 2013. (Reuters)
A view of pipelines and a loading berth of the Marsa al Hariga oil port in the city of Tobruk, east of Tripoli, Libya, Aug. 20, 2013. (Reuters)

The 600,000-barrel oil tanker Front Jaguar was loading at Libya's Brega port on Wednesday, engineers told Reuters and Kpler data showed, despite a blockade that has halted other exports.

The tanker was permitted to load oil from storage after exports had been halted at major Libyan ports, the engineers said, without giving further details.

Crude exports at major Libyan ports have been shut for nearly a week and oil output has plummeted since eastern authorities in the divided country ordered a shutdown to all oil production on Aug. 26.

The eastern authorities' declaration was in response to western factions moving to oust veteran Central Bank of Libya (CBL) Governor Sadiq al-Kabir and replace him with a rival board.

Libya's two legislative chambers said on Tuesday they had agreed a mechanism for resolving the dispute over control of the CBL, which receives revenue from Libya's oil exports, the vast bulk of the national wealth.

Crude exports remained halted at Zueitina port on Wednesday but the 5,000 tons-capacity tanker Gaz United was expected to arrive there on Thursday to load propane, engineers there told Reuters on Wednesday.

The crisis over control of the CBL threatens to spiral and could end a four-year period of relative peace in the major oil exporter long split between factions in its east and west.

The National Oil Corporation, which controls Libya's oil resources, declared force majeure at the 70,000 barrels per day El Feel oilfield on Monday. Reuters had reported last week that output was halted there.

NOC said on Aug. 28 that total oil output dropped by more than half from typical levels to just over 590,000 bpd. It was not immediately clear where current production stood.

Reuters reported on Saturday that Libya's Sarir, Messla and Nafoura oilfields had been ordered to resume production by their operator, Arabian Gulf Oil Company, an NOC subsidiary.

About 150,000 barrels per day of output from Sarir and Messla was arriving at Hariga port for local consumption, while any excess was being stored, engineers at the fields said on Wednesday.