Anti-drug authorities in Zambia said Tuesday they had arrested a Bolivian national for trafficking 2.1 kg of cocaine wrapped in 55 condoms.
Drug Enforcement Commission (DEC) Spokesperson Theresa Katongo said the 27-year-old Bolivian was arrested at Kenneth Kaunda International Airport in Lusaka, the country’s capital.
Katongo said the drugs were found wrapped up in condoms and concealed in 55 bottles of roll-on.
She said the Bolivian national was intercepted at the airport upon arrival from Rio de Janeiro via Angola aboard an Angolan Airlines flight.
The suspect is expected to appear in court soon.
Bolivia is a country in central South America, with a varied terrain spanning Andes Mountains, the Atacama Desert and Amazon Basin rainforest
Bolivia is one of the major coca leaf producers in the world, the control over coca leaf production lies with Quechua and Aymara indigenous peasant producers, who represent part of an Andean agrarian civilization dating back thousands of years. The Bolivian population regularly use the coca leaf for daily sustenance and some 40 different health remedies. For them, the coca plant has not only been a staple crop but also a powerful symbol of cultural, religious, and medicinal identity. Chewing the sacred coca leaf today remains an indispensable element for the social interaction and religious rituals of millions of native people in Peru , Colombia , Brazil and Bolivia .
Bolivia is a country in central South America, with a varied terrain spanning Andes Mountains, the Atacama Desert and Amazon Basin rainforest
Bolivia is one of the major coca leaf producers in the world, the control over coca leaf production lies with Quechua and Aymara indigenous peasant producers, who represent part of an Andean agrarian civilization dating back thousands of years. The Bolivian population regularly use the coca leaf for daily sustenance and some 40 different health remedies. For them, the coca plant has not only been a staple crop but also a powerful symbol of cultural, religious, and medicinal identity. Chewing the sacred coca leaf today remains an indispensable element for the social interaction and religious rituals of millions of native people in Peru , Colombia , Brazil and Bolivia .
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