Iraq sentences two drug traffickers to death

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - An Iraqi court on Sunday handed death sentences to two drug traffickers in Wasit province, state media reported, with authorities scrambling to control the spread of narcotics in the country. 

“The Wasit Criminal Court issued death sentences against two convicts for the crime of importing narcotic substances into Iraq from across the border,” state media said. “The convicts were found in possession of 20 kilograms of narcotic opium.” 

The penalties were handed in accordance with Article 27 of the Iraqi Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Law, the statement added. 

The Article states that any individual charged with exporting, importing, producing, or planting narcotic substances shall be either sentenced to death or life imprisonment.

There has been an alarming rise in drug dealing and use in Iraq in recent years, despite strict measures taken by the government to curb the phenomenon.

Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani has ordered the establishment of rehabilitation centers in all Iraqi provinces, excluding the Kurdistan Region, as part of his cabinet’s commitment to combat drugs with the same determination as it fights terrorism.

In 2023, more than 19,000 people were arrested across Iraq on drug-related charges and over 15 tons of psychotropic substances were seized.

The interior ministers of Iraq, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon held a quadrilateral meeting in Amman in mid-February, and agreed to establish a joint communications cell to keep up cooperation on addressing the alarming rise of narcotics in their countries.