Woman arrested in Bali by cocaine supposedly smuggling in the sex toy, she could face the death penalty if she is convicted
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Cocaine found under the man’s wig at the airport
A woman was arrested in the Bali in Indonesia after allegedly trying to smuggle cocaine to the tourist island using a sex toy and hide drugs in her underwear, police said on Tuesday.
The 42 -year -old Peruvian, identified only by his initial NS, arrived at Bali International Airport from Qatar on August 12 when the authorities suspected.
“Customs officers suspected their behavior, and after consulting the police, they did a new control over it,” he said at a press conference at a press conference.
Officers allegedly found 3.1 pounds of cocaine within a sexual toy hidden in their genitals and underwear. The police also accused her of smuggling dozens of ecstasy pills.
The Peruvian woman told the Police that she was hired to transport drugs to Indonesia by a man who met in the dark network in April in exchange for $ 20,000, said Radiant.
The woman has been accused under the hard law of narcotics of Indonesia and could face the death penalty if she is guilty. Drug traffickers condemned in Indonesia sometimes are executed by squadron.
Last month, a Bali court sentenced an Argentine of 46 years to seven years in prison after he was convicted of smuggling 244 grams of cocaine wrapped with a condom who hid inside his genitals.
Indonesia has some of the most difficult drug laws in the world. There are dozens of traffickers in the death corridor in the country, including a British grandmother who gets into cocaine.
Indonesia carried out executions for the last time in 2016, killing an Indonesian drug and three convicts of Nigerian drugs when the squad said.
In June, three British citizens accused of smuggling of more than two pounds of cocaine in Indonesia loaded In Bali. They avoided the death penalty last month, BBC reported, when a judge told them that they would only comply with a 12 -month sentence.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says that Indonesia is an important drug demand center despite having some of the strictest drug laws in the world, partly because international drug unions are directed to their young population.
The administration of Indonesian President Pabowo Subianto has moved to repatriate several high -profile inmates, all sentenced for drug crimes, back to their countries of origin.
Frenchman Serge Atlaoui returned to France in February after Yakarta and Paris agreed to repatriate him for “humanitarian motifs” because he was sick.
In December, Indonesia took Mary Jane Veloso Outside the death corridor and returned it to the Philippines. Also sent to the remaining five members of the “Bali Nine” Drug ring, which was serving prison sentences, back to Australia.
According to the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections of Indonesia, 96 foreigners were in the death corridor, all for drug positions, before the release of Veloso.
- Bali
- Cocaine
- Indonesia


