Current:Home > MyChocolate Easter bunnies made with ecstasy seized at Brussels airport: "It's pure MDMA" -Financium
Chocolate Easter bunnies made with ecstasy seized at Brussels airport: "It's pure MDMA"
View
Date:2025-04-12 06:57:54
Belgian bunnies will be an Easter treat for kids around the world this weekend, but not all are molded from the country's renowned chocolate.
A batch of rabbits seized this week by veteran customs officer Pol Meuleneire was crafted from a solid lump of MDMA, the raw material for pills of the rave drug ecstasy.
Known as the gateway into Europe for Latin American cocaine, Belgium has now also become a turntable for mail-order synthetic drugs, made in Europe and sent worldwide.
Meuleneire, who retires in a few months after 43 years in Belgium's customs service, told AFP that when he began his career he was excited to find 10 grams of cannabis in a letter.
Now, his workspace in an office block in the freight zone at Brussels airport is overflowing with suspect packages -- and bags and jars of illegal pills and powders.
"So in 2022 we got to nearly six tons of drugs, seized here at the airport," explained Florence Angelici, spokeswoman for the SPF federal finance service.
"It goes all over the world. Today, people can order online on the 'dark web' in a few clicks and can decide what they want and have it delivered to their homes."
The false chocolate bunnies had been parceled up and posted in Belgium, addressed to a buyer in Hong Kong, only to be intercepted at the Brussels airport freight terminal.
Meuleneire pressed his handheld scanner -- which uses Raman spectroscopy to identify substances by their chemical fingerprint -- against one supposed chocolate rabbit and took a reading.
The screen flashed green and the analysis was clear: "Caution: MDMA (ecstasy)".
"So you see? It's pure MDMA," the 61-year-old said. "So here we have, bumpety-bump, one or two kilograms of this. With one kilogram you make six thousand ecstasy pills."
And, as Meuleneire worked his box cutter during a visit by AFP journalists, several more illicit deliveries emerged from packages received in just the past week.
A Peppa Pig branded lunchbox destined for New Zealand itself proved innocent, but the packaging it was carried in felt too heavy to be just cardboard and plastic.
Packed into a corrugated plastic parcel divider: ketamine, an anesthetic misused as a recreational drug and one of the fastest growing illegal exports through the airport postal depot.
A toy chemistry set for studying the growth of crystals was found to contain a shrink-wrapped bag of crystal meth, an illegal and addictive synthetic stimulant.
There is even cocaine, slid in plastic packets between double layers of cardboard packaging, making the parcel suspiciously heavy to an experienced customs officer.
Belgium's Antwerp is the main port of entry into Europe for Latin American cocaine, but some is re-exported by post to countries like Australia, where it fetches a higher street price.
Gangs in countries like Venezuela, which export plant-based narcotics like cocaine to Europe, in turn import synthetic drugs like crystal meth from European labs.
But most of the mail-order exports are of synthetic drugs made in rogue labs and covert pharma plants in Belgium and especially, according to Belgian officials, the Netherlands.
Ketamine, MDMA and methamphetamine are disguised in everyday objects or packaged in jars marked as legal vitamin supplements, then mailed from ordinary post offices in Belgium, France and Germany.
"Here, we're talking mainly about using the Belgian postal service, which might attract less attention from customs officers in the arrival countries than the Dutch one," Angelici told AFP.
"The smugglers use mules to transport the parcels and to post them from all over Belgium, and other European countries, and send them all around the world."
At the airport, a computerized platform selects packages based on known suspect features and customs officers go to work scanning them and in some cases cutting them open.
Souvenirs in Meuleneire's workspace include portraits of Jesus Christ that were held in frames stuffed with drugs, teddy bears full of pills and copper pipes packed with veterinary tranquilizers.
Global cocaine production has soared to record highs after declining during the coronavirus pandemic, according to a report released last month from the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime. Between 2020 and 2021, cocaine production jumped 35%, the sharpest yearly increase since 2016, the report says.
The report came shortly after a submarine with two dead bodies and nearly three tons of cocaine on board was seized in the Pacific Ocean.
The increase is due to a combination of expansion in coca bush cultivation and improved techniques in making cocaine, the UNODC report said.
New hubs for cocaine trafficking are emerging in Southeastern Europe and West and Central Africa, according to the report, with North Sea ports like Rotterdam, Antwerp and Hamburg overtaking traditional entryways to Europe in Spain and Portugal. Traffickers in Central America are also diversifying their routes by sending more cocaine to Europe.
- In:
- Belgium
- Cocaine
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Ryan Reynolds Details How Anxiety Helps Him as a Dad to His and Blake Lively’s Kids
- Murder trial ordered in Michigan killing that stoked anti-immigrant campaign rhetoric
- California beach reopens after closing when shark bumped surfer off surfboard: Reports
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki’s Son Marco Troper’s Cause of Death Revealed
- What to know as Conservatives and Labour vie for votes 1 week into Britain’s election campaign
- Vermont’s Republican governor allows ghost gun bill to become law without his signature
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- At Sen. Bob Menendez’s bribery trial, prosecutors highlight his wife’s desperate finances
Ranking
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- 'Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door' worth the wait: What to know about new Switch game
- Homeowners face soaring insurance costs as violent storms wreak havoc
- Lionel Messi scores goal in return to lineup, but Inter Miami falls 3-1 to Atlanta United
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Why Real Housewives of Dubai's Caroline Stanbury Used Ozempic During Midlife Crisis
- West Virginia’s first ombudsman for state’s heavily burdened foster care system resigns
- Alligator still missing nearly a week after disappearing at Missouri middle school
Recommendation
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
Reports: Texans, WR Nico Collins agree to three-year, $72.75 million extension
TikTok ban challenge set for September arguments
Oilers roar back, score 5 unanswered goals to tie conference finals with Stars 2-2
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
‘Star Trek’ actor George Takei is determined to keep telling his Japanese American story
'Dance Moms' star Kelly Hyland reveals breast cancer diagnosis
California beach reopens after closing when shark bumped surfer off surfboard: Reports