
Foreigners caught smuggling cannabis into Heathrow being immediately deported under new rules
The move comes amid a huge influx of dangerous and highly addictive Kush cannabis into Britain
NEXT JET HOME Foreigners caught smuggling cannabis into Heathrow being immediately deported under new rules
FOREIGNERS caught smuggling cannabis into Heathrow are having their drugs seized and are immediately deported under new rules.
The seize and return pilot scheme led by UK Border Force and the National Crime Agency means the drug mules are not arrested in this country.
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Instead, they will be sent straight back home, where it is understood the authorities there will deal with them.
The trial began last Monday and is expected to run for three months.
It will keep foreign criminals out of UK prisons and avoid taxpayers having to foot the bill.
It could be rolled out across all UK airports, if successful.
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The move comes amid a huge influx of dangerous and highly addictive Kush cannabis into Britain.
The cheap, synthetic drug is cut with additives including acetone, the opioid tramadol, and formalin — a toxic chemical commonly used to preserve bodies in mortuaries.
It has claimed the lives of thousands in West Africa since appearing there in 2022, before spreading around the world.
In recent weeks, a string of young people have been caught trying to smuggle the drug into the UK, mostly from Thailand, where cannabis is legal.
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Criminal gangs previously relied on postal deliveries to get the drugs here.
But cannabis arrivals by mail from Thailand plummeted by 90 per cent in the first three months of this year, thanks to a new partnership between UK Border Force and Thai customs.
Brit teen facing life in prison after being 'caught with 14kg of cannabis' in her luggage after huge airport arrest
Now, gangs are offering free paradise holidays, with unlimited booze, drugs and £2,000-plus in cash, to young people willing to be drugs mules.
Since July, 800 people, including 50 from Britain, have been detained in Thailand for alleged drug smuggling, with more than nine tons of cannabis seized.
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The Home Office confirmed it was booting out foreign smugglers trying to bring in 'small quantities' — but has not said exactly how much.

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BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Former Kent prostitute says she was a victim of rape and abuse
A former prostitute has opened up on her experience selling sex, detailing how women were often assaulted and raped, and that she was forced to make a "different personality" for herself in order to who is aged in her 20s, said sex workers can be "demonised" by authorities, as she detailed one harrowing account of her being in hospital after being attacked by a was contacted by the charity Streetlight UK, which has expanded its operation across south-east England, and has called for additional funding and resources to support more women in the Home Office has been approached for comment. The exchange of sexual services for money is legal in England, Scotland and it is illegal to partake in solicitation on the streets, pay for sex if someone is forced into it, own or manage a brothel, control a prostitute and the money they earn, and advertise sexual services, like putting cards in a phone activities such as kerb crawling are also illegal. Jane, not her real name, was a prostitute in Kent until a couple of months started selling sex at a property when she was 18 for a short period of time. By the time she was 24 she couldn't work due to her health and decided to go back into says selling sex was an option to earn money."You don't work many hours and you get quite a lot [of money] but it's not worth the risk that is involved," she told BBC South East."People stole from me, assault was not uncommon, rape, attempted rape, all those kind of things - and that's considered lucky."I made a completely different personality for myself in order to cope, so I would just switch off and try to essentially become a different person."When you first get into it there are people that purposely prey on the ones that are new, because you haven't established the red flags that you need to."You just somehow become more savvy in knowing who to avoid and who not to." She was supported by the charity Streetlight UK, a support service for women involved in prostitution, sexual exploitation and says prostitutes are demonized, and when she was treated in hospital after an assault, the staff were not very said: "There was like no support at all, because I didn't want to report it, because of how it occurred basically."I think there needs to be more empathy." Streetlight UK says since it started operating in Medway in March 2023, it has directly supported 244 service recently began operated in East Kent, and 59 women have received support since April last the number supported in Surrey and Sussex has steadily grown from 366 in 2020/21 to 459 in 2024/ executive Helena Croft said there was demand for its services in the community."Homeless charities, mental health, sexual health, they're telling us there's nothing like us and they really need help," she said."They need that support to understand the trauma and impact of prostitution on women." Potential exploitation of victims Ms Croft said the internet has changed prostitution "significantly" because it's become accessible to anyone at any added the government was doing "some good work", but she would like to see more services like hers rolled out across London and the South East.A lot of the organisation's crisis work involves supporting women in financial hardship who've turned to prostitution, but they also work with police and support suspected victims of sex trafficking. In 2024, 1246 people were identified by the National Referral Mechanism (NRM) as being potential victims of sexual exploitation. The NRM, run by the Home Office, is a process in the UK for identifying and supporting victims of modern slavery and human trafficking. Dr Erin Sanders-McDonagh, a senior criminologist at the University of Kent, says many women choose to go into prostitution, and not all of them want to leave the industry. She said: "Single mothers with young children, these are the kinds of people who are suffering the most under austerity, particularly in places like north Kent where there's not a lot of access to high paying jobs."Sex becomes a very reasonable and logical option for women who need to make extra money." 'Exploitation and rape' The National Police Chiefs guidance encourages forces to focus on the vulnerability of street sex workers and prioritise pursuing those who commit exploitation or violence against sex Vajzovic, the NPCC lead for the policing of sex work, says guidance recognises the vulnerability of many sex workers, "particularly those who're involved in selling sex on the street".He added: "Over recent years we have seen really strong recognition to understand the vulnerability of sex workers and focus our enforcement activities on those carrying out that exploitation"."In this context it is about criminal exploitation and rape and to prosecute those types of offences." If you have been affected by the issues raised in this story you can visit the BBC Action Line for support.


Telegraph
10 hours ago
- Telegraph
Contractor in Heathrow migrant escape ‘lost another deportee'
The contractor at the centre of a migrant escape at Heathrow airport 'lost' another deportee in Istanbul, a former officer has claimed. Gary Costin, a former deportee custody officer with the contractor Mitie, said the escape attempt at Heathrow was not an isolated case, and cited four other examples of deportees attempting to abscond in the past three years. On Sunday, an illegal migrant about to be deported back to India was filmed being chased across the airport tarmac pursued by security officers before being caught. He was being escorted by contractors Mitie Care and Custody on behalf of the Home Office. Mr Costin, who was sacked by Mitie after sharing a Reform MP's post, claimed: 'Subcontractors who were working for Mitie taking people back to Somalia lost this individual in Turkey. 'I don't believe he has ever been found. He managed to escape through a hole in the roof, in the toilet or smoking area at Istanbul airport.' Speaking on Talk Radio, he also alleged another deportee on a courtroom visit for a hearing managed to escape out of a window while a third pushed past escorts on an air bridge crowded with passengers at Heathrow before he was subsequently found in a lavatory. A fourth managed to smash a window in the back of a van in Heathrow before evading two escorts, claimed Mr Costin. A team leader managed to detain him. He alleged that the 'gene pool' of good escorts had been watered down by an intensive recruitment campaign by Mitie. 'Training then was done by inexperienced staff who hadn't been in the job five minutes. And it was like the blind leading the blind,' he said. He alleged a basic lack of fitness among officers. 'The fitness of 50 per cent of the staff, I would say, is questionable, and there is no fitness test whatsoever. There were thoughts and talk about bringing fitness tests in, but this didn't happen because they realised they would lose too many staff because of this,' he said. Mitie said it could not comment on individual operations but sources maintained the incident at Heathrow airport on Sunday was extremely rare and was being fully investigated. 'We are proud of the high standards and professional conduct that our care and custody colleagues exhibit every day, often in very challenging circumstances, when carrying out escorting services,' said a source. 'All of our officers have undergone an extensive training programme including the Home Office manual for escorting safely training course – specialist training to ensure escorts have all the skills required to safely remove people from the country – as well as having annual refreshers.' Mr Costin was sacked after sharing a post on X by then Reform leader Richard Tice. It commented on a GB News article headlined 'Home Office Islamic Network aimed to recruit Muslim staff and 'influence policymakers' from the inside'. The piece pointed to Home Office documents showing that a group of more than 700 civil servants aimed to make policy more inclusive of Muslim needs. Mr Costin, who had spent 15 years working for government contractors G4S and Mitie, forwarded a screenshot of Tice's post, which had already been captioned 'Uh oh'. The 57-year-old was suspended in April last year and later sacked, although he had not added any of his own comments when sending the message to a WhatsApp group.


Scottish Sun
11 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
I watched ISIS burn my pilot brother alive in a cage – I begged the air force to bomb jail so he'd be spared cruel death
His mother was hospitalised after hearing of her son's cruel killing and his sister was diagnosed with diabetes LEFT TO DIE I watched ISIS burn my pilot brother alive in a cage – I begged the air force to bomb jail so he'd be spared cruel death Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE brother of a pilot who was burned alive in Syria by ISIS said he begged air forces to bomb the jail where he was being held to spare him a cruel death. Speaking at the Stockholm district court on Wednesday, Jawdat al-Kassasbeh recounted the turmoil he and his family have endured since his brother Maaz al-Kassasbeh was savagely killed. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 6 Muath Al-Kasasbeh, 26, pictured trapped inside the cage in the horrific ISIS execution video 6 The gruesome 2015 footage showed him being set alight 6 Militants with the captured pilot Credit: AP:Associated Press The Royal Jordanian Air Force pilot was shot down in Raqqa, Syria, in December 2014. A few weeks later, ISIS released a video of al-Kasasbeh being burned alive in a cage. Osama Krayem, a 32-year-old Swede already serving long prison sentences for his role in the Paris and Brussels attacks in 2015 and 2016, is on trial in Stockholm for his role in the pilot's killing. The slain pilot's brother told the court of the physical and psychological trauma he and his family have suffered since his sibling's death. He said he learned of his capture through a relative who worked at Jordan's foreign ministry and immediately headed to the air force headquarters. He said: "There, I see that the head of the air force and the operations teams are having a meeting on the subject... There were large screens showing images of Syria. He told me: 'I think he's in this house', "Psychologically, I was not doing well at that moment. So I told the head of the air force that ... I thought (IS fighters) would kill him in a horrible way. "I asked if it would be possible to bomb the house so he could be spared an atrocious death," he added. Jawdat later found out about his brother's death on TV. He said: "It was a shock. I watched the whole video but in bits. I couldn't watch the entire video until 2021." He added that the cruel nature in which his brother was killed took a massive toll on the whole family, in particular his mother who had to be hospitalised. I fought ISIS in Syria & I know bloodthirsty thugs are plotting comeback after fall of Assad - Europe must be ready, says Brit fighter Jawdat also puts his sister's diabetes down to his brother's torturous death, as well as his dad's hypertension and poor mental health. The court hearing comes as another ISIS leader believed to have also been involved in burning the Jordanian pilot to death was captured. Syrian national Saddam al-Jamal was captured in Iraq after being lured from Syria by intelligence officers using the phone of Ismail al-Ethawi, an ISIS lieutenant captured in February. Tipped as a future leader of the terrorist organisation, al-Jamal was known for his brutality. Jordanian authorities accused him of also being behind the brutal execution of downed pilot. A former commander in the Free Syrian Army which fought against President Bashar al-Assad's forces, al-Jamal had also taken part in multiple atrocities including a 2014 massacre in Deir Ezzor, Syria, in which 700 members of a tribe opposed to ISIS were killed. He also ordered the execution of children, sometimes in front of their parents. Al-Ethawi, who was captured in February, was a top aide to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. Intelligence officers used his account on Telegram, a social media app favoured by terror organisations because it encrypts messages, to lure the other four high-ranking leaders out of Syria. The five of them were on a group chat together. Iraqi security adviser Hisham al Hashemi told The Telegraph that Iraqi troops were surprised to see the four senior senior jihadists travel on motorcycles, having expecting them to arrive in a motorcade. Al-Hashemi also said that American troops also took part in the operation. ISIS field commanders Mohamed al-Qadeer, Issam Abdel Kader al-Zawba'i and Omar Shehab El-Karboul were also captured in the sting, which has been praised by Donald Trump. 'Five Most Wanted leaders of ISIS just captured,' the US president posted on Twitter last week. 6 Jordanian pilot executed by ISIS 6 Saddam al-Jamal pictured in images broadcast on Iraqi TV