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Interior and
National Administration Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen Thursday put on
notice drug traffickers in the country.
Speaking to
the media during his Jukwaa La Usalama tour of Isiolo, Murkomen issued a stern
warning, stating that the government is now cracking down on drug barons who
were using the town as a conduit.
He said the
drug menace in Isiolo is only second to Nairobi and Mombasa, naming cocaine,
cannabis, and heroin as the most used and trafficked substances.
He said drug
traffickers are powerful people, some of whom are heavily armed.
“We have
made significant progress in tackling drug trafficking in this county. We are
now targeting those behind the trafficking networks to ensure we completely dismantle
this menace,” he said.
Isiolo has
been in the spotlight due to a surge in abuse of hard drugs in recent days,
with the county serving as a transit route for trafficking from neighboring
Ethiopia.
This has
prompted a government-led crackdown under Operation Ondoa Jangili, targeting
cross-border drug trade.
The
operation has so far been successful, with authorities seizing drugs worth
millions and arresting dozens of notorious peddlers, including 78 foreign
nationals.
“Operation
Ondoa Jangili has done a commendable job in the fight against drug trafficking
in this area. We have seized tonnes of drugs in transit that would have
destroyed our youth, and we have brought those responsible to justice,” said
CS.
He was
accompanied by MPs Joseph Samal ( Isiolo South) and Mohamed Tubi ( Isiolo
North), General Service Unit Commandant Ranson Lolmodooni, Eastern Regional
Commissioner Paul Rotich, and Isiolo County Commissioner Geoffrey Omoding,
among other senior security and administrative officials.
The border
town of Moyale in northern Kenya is an entry point for large hauls of bhang
widely grown in southern Ethiopia.
Once the
bhang leaves Shashamane, it heads down south to the border points of Moyale,
Sololo, Corolla, Uran and Dukana.
Others use
Mandera, Wajir, Garissa route.
The other
route runs from Funannyata in Sololo, Marsabit county, to the Yamicha plains of
Merti subcounty in Isiolo.
They take
the consignments to Eastleigh, Majengo and Mlango Kubwa for repackaging and
distribution.
In March
2020, detectives arrested a man with 56 bales of bhang, packaged like
second-hand clothes. The consignment weighed 466 kilograms.
Officials
and anti-drugs authorities are concerned over the increasing seizures of
shashamane.
The drug,
which originates in Ethiopia is becoming popular locally and has been on the
market for a few years.
Officials
say an increase in the use of shashamane is a major challenge in fighting
substance abuse.
The drug is
boiled in a pot and smoked like shisha, or rolled into joints.
Some addicts
mix the drug with mustard seed oil and cannabis before rolling it in joints.
The smoke
can affect people as far as four metres away.
Traffickers
often conceal it in sacks of rice and sugar.