A 24-year-old Guyanese man was held at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport yesterday morning after three kilogrammes of cocaine was discovered under a fibre-glass panel in his suitcase.
According to reports, the man was travelling to Barbados when he was intercepted by CANU officials who searched his suitcase.
A section of the man’s suitcase, which was partitioned by fibre-glass, a Capitol News report said, and beneath the fibre-glass covering the stated amount of illegal substance was discovered.
Further, the news report said that the man’s movements were being monitored by the law enforcement officials for some time. He is in custody.




well done, need many trained dogs to do the work, we will see many more arrest.
…..ever wonder why the AMERICAN govt ,, revoked the COP’s visa ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????…..
NO WE KNOW!!
some people just would’nt learn.
Guess, very rare first offenders are caught, so they keep staying to the fast money, thats why when caught have to be lost en the jail house…
VERY GOOD FOR YOU ALL- GT. I WOULD HAVE DONE THE SAME THING , LEAD THE MULE TO THE SOURCE & THERE YOU , HAVE THE BIG FISH IN THE NET.
At lease the news I am hearing is good for a change too much drugs mules are getting through the airport recently , also hope this was a real bust , those of you who are guyanese will know what I mean if you try bringing your stuff through the airport and you do not have a contact well your goose are cook , hope canu can get the big horse not just the small mules , will be looking and lisening for the next bust and how long it will take to happen that will tell me a lot.
Defeat Plan Columbia
“Keep it “LIT”
Easy money is a hell of an addiction. Mules will always be available in a society where jobs are scarce.
Whenever I read of cases like this I wonder when or if people ln Guyana will ever learn. I wish the TV companies in Guyana will show movies like “Tropical Snow” and “Maria Full of Grace”. I wish they would show episodes of the popular Bio channel documentary “Locked Up Abroad”.
Although I care very much about Guyanese suffering untold hardships and grinding poverty at home, I will maintain that resorting to drug smuggling is definitely not the way to go. Every day at work I see many Guyanese suffering the penalties for resorting to crime. Whenever I have to sign body receipts and other documents for delivery of a Guyanese to other authorities for eventual deportation, IT HURTS.
In the time of Forbes we all know the big men in GT. But now ordinary guyanese building five star hotels.
who say jobs are scarce? if that is the rational, you may have to get in the business soon , .. inthe next few months, they say the US. GON DROP OFF , BOUT A MILLION , of Alyah, …a gun keep a lookout for yuh at the airport….. HE”” HE”’HE”…..