
British mum arrested in Mauritius for 'smuggling drugs' in young son's luggage
Natashia Artug, 35, was arrested alongside seven others accused of carrying cannabis worth £1.6 million in their luggage on a British Airways flight from Gatwick to Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam airport last month.
The child's suitcase reportedly had 24 packages of drugs weighing 14kg, which Mauritian authorities described as 'outrageous and inhumane'.
They added: 'This is one of the most revolting cases we have encountered in recent years.'
Natshia's partner Florian Lisman, 38, was also arrested and said to be carrying 32 drug packages according to local newspaper Le Mauricien.
Others arrested include Patrick Lee Wilsdon, 22, Lily Watson, 20, Shannon Ellen Josie Holness 29, Laura Amy Kappen 28, and Shona Campbell, 32, who each had between 30 to 31 packages.
They have all been charged with drug trafficking.
The boy has already been flown back to the UK and is staying with his dad.
But Natashia, from Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, is 'vulnerable' and was coerced into smuggling the drugs by people who threatened her and her family, Justice Abroad has said.
They have launched a fundraiser to cover Natashia's legal costs and bring her back to the UK.
They wrote: 'Natashia is a single mother of two, who suffers from Fibromyalgia but who attends university and is working to give her children a better future.
'She was coerced into travelling to Mauritius with her young son, and to carry the luggage which she did not know contained cannabis, by individuals involved in the drugs trade who took advantage of her vulnerability and made threats to cause serious violence to her and her family if she refused to obey their orders. More Trending
'This case raises serious concerns about the exploitation of a young mother by a criminal gang.
'She now faces criminal trial in Mauritius separated from her children and without the resources to mount an adequate defence and to put together the evidence of the duress and exploitation which resulted in her being involved in.'
The Foreign Office said: 'We are supporting a British national detained in Mauritius and are in contact with the local authorities.'
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
MORE: Major evacuation amid fears of explosives found at a Bristol home
MORE: Woman, 86, arrested after 'human remains buried in 1970s' reported in Leicester
MORE: Girl, 9, shot in head 'by motorbike hitman during botched gangland murder'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Tragic end to search for Brit who went missing on trip to ancient Turkish tombs as body is found after three-day search
The search for an elderly British man who went missing on a trip to ancient Turkish tombs has ended in tragedy. Following a three-day search in and around the ancient tombs of Kaunos in Turkey for the 79-year-old, investigators found a body. The man was reported missing by his daughter, who he travelled with to Çandır, a village in Muğla's Köyceğiz district in southwestern Turkey, for a holiday together on July 26. At 10.30am that day, her father began a trip by rowboat to the nearby rock-cut temple tombs of Kaunos, also known as the Lycian rock tombs, but she lost contact with him and has not heard from his since. Following his daughter's report, Turkish authorities launched a search for the man with a 19-person team, consisting of the Köyceğiz Gendarmerie District Command, Muğla AFAD and an NGO. An investigation is now underway to understand exactly how the man went missing. Autopsies will also be carried out to determine the body's exact cause of death. Between Dalyan and Kaunos, there are more than 150 rock-cut tombs marking the resting place of the Lycian elite. Found on the banks of the Dalyan River, the burial sites date back to the 4th century BC and can be viewed from the water via boat trips. The impressive ruins of the ancient trading city of Kaunos be found across the river from the cliffs, in modern-day Dalyan. The archeological site has many well-preserved structures, including a Hellenistic theatre, a Roman bath, and temples. The rock-cut facades of the graves resemble the fronts of Hellenistic temples, complete with a pair of Ionian pillars, a triangular pediment, and an architrave with toothed friezes, according to the World Heritage Convention.


Metro
9 hours ago
- Metro
Trump insists he turned down invitation to Epstein island
President Donald Trump has insisted that he turned down 'the privilege' of visiting the late Jeffrey Epstein's infamous private island. Trump said he rejected an invitation to the Caribbean island Little Saint James, where many of Epstein's alleged sex crimes were committed. 'I never had the privilege of going to his island, and I did turn it down, but a lot of people in Palm Beach were invited to his island,' Trump told reporters on Monday. 'In one of my very good moments, I turned it down. 'I didn't want to go to his island.' Trump was asked about his administration's ongoing Epstein controversy during a bilateral meeting with British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in Turnberry, Scotland. The US president has previously denied ever going to Epstein's 75-acre paradise in the US Virgin Islands. The disgraced financier and convicted sex offender, assisted by his girlfriend and accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell, allegedly sex trafficked young women and underage girls at the island. On Monday, Trump also said that Epstein 'stole' people who worked for him by hiring them away. 'I said, 'Don't ever do that again.' He did it again,' Trump said. 'And I threw him out of the place persona non grata. I threw him out, and that was it. I'm glad I did, if you want to know the truth. And by the way, I never went to the island.' He added that he wouldn't speak to Epstein for years 'because he did something that was inappropriate'. White House spokesman Steven Cheung last week stated that 'the fact is that The President kicked (Epstein) out of his (Mar-a-Lago) club for being a creep'. The Trump administration has continued to face backlash on its handling of the Epstein case after the Justice Department and FBI earlier this monthsaid there was no incriminating client list, despite previous promises to release the documents. More Trending Trump's name is in flight logs from Epstein's plane, ABC News reported. However, most of the flights recorded are from Palm Beach, Florida, to Teterboro, New Jersey. Epstein purchased Little St James, dubbed 'Pedophile Island', in 1998. Numerous politicians, celebrities and public figures stayed there overnight. Trump on Monday again did not rule out clemency for Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking. He said, as he did last week, that he is 'allowed to give her a pardon' but has not been asked about it, and 'right now it would be inappropriate to talk about it'. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Donald Trump bizarrely demands Beyonce is 'prosecuted' for supporting Kamala Harris MORE: 'Awkward' Keir Starmer tried to rekindle 'bromance' with Donald Trump during visit MORE: Multiple people injured in mass shooting at Reno resort


Daily Mirror
11 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Ghislaine Maxwell makes last ditch plea to quash her sex trafficking conviction
Ghislaine Maxwell is making a bid for freedom after she was convicted in 2021 on federal charges of trafficking young girls for her then boyfriend Jeffrey Epstein Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell has made a last ditch plea in a bid to quash her sex trafficking conviction. British socialite Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2022 on federal charges of trafficking young girls for her billionaire paedophile boyfriend Epstein. But Maxwell is making a bid for freedom, arguing she is covered by a 2007 plea deal that Epstein reached with prosecutors in South Florida. The murky terms of the deal included that none of his accomplices would be charged in connection with his crimes. Her lawyers filed the appeal and urged the Supreme Court to overturn the conviction. "This case is about what the government promised, not what Epstein did," Maxwell's lawyers told justices on Monday. Monster Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison over her connection to Epstein's schemes to sexually abuse underage girls. The New York-based Second US Circuit Court of Appeals previously ruled against Maxwell, stating the terms of the agreement made with prosecutors in Florida was not legally binding in New York. The Supreme Court is due to debate the case and is expected to come to a decision in the autumn, CNN reported. Epstein pleased guilty to prostitution charges in 2008 and went on to be charged on federal sex trafficking charges in July 2019. He died in his prison cell in 2019 with his death being ruled a suicide. The ongoing Epstein saga and Maxwell's bid for freedom have proved to be massive thorns in the side of Donald Trump's administration. Multiple members of the Trump administration vowed to release documents that his supporters believed contained the names of powerful people who were connected to Epstein and abused children alongside him. But a massive twist emerged last month after members of the Trump administration claimed not only was there no list but that Epstein had indeed died by suicide in his Manhattan prison cell. Both statements were met with fury by Trump supporters who believe it was part of a cover up by the administration, despite no evidence existing to suggest this. Mr Trump further added to the confusing narrative when he refused on multiple occasions to say that he would deny Maxwell a presidential pardon - essentially freeing her from prison should he wish to do so. Mr Trump previously told reporters: "Well, I'm allowed to give her a pardon, but I — nobody's approached me with it. Nobody's asked me about it. It's in the news about that, that aspect of it, but right now, it would be inappropriate to talk about it." But Mr Trump's comments have not been welcomed by everyone in his party with US House speaker Mike Johnson said on Sunday he would have "great pause" abou granting a pardon to Maxwell.