Malaysia

Police seize over RM221 mil worth of Captagon pills in Port Klang

650kg of ‘jihad drug’ found in shipping container containing aluminium floor spring

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 08 Apr 2021 1:11PM

Police seize over RM221 mil worth of Captagon pills in Port Klang
The Captagon pills seized at Port Klang were meant for the West Asian market, and NCID director Datuk Razarudin Husain says preventive measures should be taken so Malaysia does not become a transit country for the drug. – Pixabay pic, April 8, 2021

PORT KLANG – The Narcotic Crime Investigation Department (NCID) has seized 650kg of Captagon pills, an amphetamine drug known as “jihad drug”, worth a whopping RM221.86 million, here on Monday.

NCID director Datuk Razarudin Husain said the seizure, the second involving Captagon pills in Malaysia, was made possible with the cooperation and intelligence-sharing by Saudi Arabia’s General Directorate of Narcotics Control (GDNC).

Acting on the information, he said the NCID had detected a container ship that came into a dock at the West Port here on Sunday with one of the containers, which was declared as containing aluminium floor spring, was meant to be transferred to another ship heading to Singapore on Tuesday.

“The drugs were found after the scanning of the container showed suspicious images of the pills inside the aluminium floor spring.

“The drugs were transported from the Middle East and were in transit at Port Klang before heading to West Asian countries to meet market demand there,” he told a press conference here today.

Razarudin, however, said that no arrest was made during the operation and that the NCID and the GDNC will continue to work together to take down the drug ring.

He said the Captagon pill was initially used to increase muscle strength in Germany in the 1960s but was banned in the United States and Europe in the 1980s after it was categorised as a drug.

The pill, which contains amphetamine and fenethylline, is usually used by Daesh militants in Syria to give them ‘courage’, he said.

“We don’t want Malaysia to be a transit country for the drug.

“So far, the drug has not entered the Malaysian market and we want to keep it that way,” he added. – Bernama, April 8, 2021

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