South China Morning Post

Police to expand mass drug crackdown

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Police in Sri Lanka’s yesterday said they would more than double the number of suspects arrested in an ongoing anti-narcotics crackdown condemned by the United Nations, with tens of thousands already detained.

At least 30,000 people have been arrested since the police operation code-named “Yuktiya” or “Justice” began in December.

Police yesterday said they were launching a new phase to arrest a further 42,248 suspects. “All police stations must work 24 hours a day for the next one month to arrest 42,248 suspects and bring them to justice,” they said in a statement.

It came two days after the UN human rights agency criticised the police crackdown over allegation­s of unauthoris­ed searches, arbitrary arrests and detention, ill-treatment, public stripsearc­hes and torture.

Volker Turk, the UN high commission­er for human rights, urged Sri Lanka’s government to review the operation and implement a rights-based approach to combating illicit drugs.

“Security forces have reportedly conducted raids without search warrants, detaining suspected drug sellers and users, with hundreds sent to military-run rehabilita­tion centres,” a spokeswoma­n for Turk said on Friday.

“While drug use presents a serious challenge to society, a heavy-handed law enforcemen­t approach is not the solution.”

The spokeswoma­n said lawyers defending detained suspects had faced intimidati­on from police officers.

Authoritie­s believe the Indian Ocean island is being used as a drug traffickin­g transit point.

Sri Lankan police have said nearly 800kg of narcotics, including 340kg of cannabis and 70kg of heroin, have been seized in the operation.

One rights activist, Ambika Satkunanat­han, argues the searches are not based on evidence but are “targeting only poor areas” and ignoring largescale trafficker­s.

On December 31, police said an officer was killed and another critically wounded when troops opened fire on an undercover unit during a drug raid at a hotel as part of the Yuktiya operation.

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