Kampala, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT | Police are holding four people suspected of supplying drug-laced cookies and snacks in several schools in Wakiso and Kampala. Police spokesperson Fred Enanga has identified the suspects as Rachael Masanga, Suilaman Kasoozi, Joshua Ayo, and Jovia Mbabazi.
The four have allegedly been making deliveries in schools in Kira municipality, Wakiso district, Bugolobi, Kulambiro, and other parts of Kampala district. Trouble for the suspects started over the weekend when one unnamed school suspended ten female students in Namugongo who had ordered the drug-laced cookies for a party at the school.
However, the cookies were intercepted by school security. “The school management alerted police and our officers from the anti-narcotics department from Criminal Investigations Directorate-CID together with ordinary police swung into action and arrested one of the suppliers who led police to her accomplices in Kungu-Kira municipality where they had a factory,” Enanga said.
Police have since recovered suspected drug substances the suspects have been using to make cookies, pancakes, snacks, and other foodstuffs. “There was processed chill packed as Akabanga chili oil mixed with marijuana, drug-laced cookies, pancakes laced with drugs, and daddies laced with marijuana. There was chapa mandazi laced with drugs, wheat flour mixed with marijuana….packaged and labeled similarly with those products in the supermarket,” Enanga said.
Enanga explains that the four suspects currently detained at Jinja police station will be charged with drug trafficking, and being in possession of narcotic substances among other charges.
Assistant Commissioner of Police Tinka Zarugaba from the Anti-Narcotic Police department explains due to the fertile soils and good climate in Uganda, there is a worrying increase in the number of people growing cannabis in all parts of the country, which may fuel drug addiction.
According to Zarugaba, the latest research conducted by the police anti-narcotics unit in collaboration with Makerere University shows that 16% of youths in urban areas are under the influence of drugs, which is disastrous to the country.
“There is a need for everyone to participate in the fight against drug trafficking as its impacts would be irreversible by now, instead of just condemning. Ugandans should start telling their children about the danger of drugs to children when they are young,” he said.
Fred Enanga has called on schools to stay vigilant because the indirect consumption of drugs among children is on the increase. “This is dangerous because these suspects have been targeting young children between 13-20 years in high school, we’re calling upon school administrators, parents, and guardians that this is now the indirect way of children consuming drugs, and once our young children are recruited into consuming drugs, it’s a danger to society,” Enanga noted.
According to the 2021 crime report, 1,668 Narcotic-related cases were reported to police compared to 1,714 cases reported in 2020. A total of 23,887.83kgs of assorted narcotics were seized at Entebbe international airport in 2021, compared to 41.94kgs seized in 2020 and 132.012kgs that were seized in 2019.
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