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D.C. Seeks Tougher Penalties for Khat

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Gary Emerling, Washington Post, October 13, 2008

The District is moving to stiffen penalties for a little-known drug that authorities suspect is used by cabdrivers in the city to stay alert and to finance terrorism overseas.

Parts of the khat plant—a flowering evergreen shrub native to East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula—when fresh can produce effects similar to those of cocaine. Chewing the leaves is socially acceptable in countries such as Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia.

In the District and elsewhere across the country, officials are noticing and combating the drug’s use: In 2004, federal agents seized 3,000 pounds of khat worth more than $5 million at the Port of Baltimore. The Metropolitan Police Department in May arrested nearly three dozen people and seized 30 pounds of khat during a raid in the Northwest neighborhood of Shaw.

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Khat is generally sent to the United States via couriers who put the plant in their suitcases, or it is sent by express mail, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The plant is purchased from farmers in the Horn of Africa, then sent in the planes of area warlords to Europe, where it is sold to middlemen and shipped to the United States, the DEA said.

Detective James said American women are occasionally hired as khat couriers, or “mules.” The plant is packed with dry ice when shipped and freeze-dried upon its arrival to preserve its freshness.

In the United States, khat can sell for as much as $600 a kilogram or $60 for a bundle of 40 leafed twigs, according to the DEA. Merchants on the Internet advertise khat seeds for sale, and Detective James said the plant is sold in some D.C. restaurants “under the table.”

“If you go into [ethnic] restaurants and think you can purchase it, they stop talking,” he said. “They act like they don’t know what you’re talking about.”

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The plant has become a viable revenue source for the Ethiopian economy, which is best known for its coffee production but has few other lucrative exports.

Khat is used among hired drivers who take the drug to stay alert during long shifts, Inspector Bray and Detective James said. No drivers interviewed by The Washington Times said they had heard of their colleagues using khat on the job.

Habtamu Yacob, an Ethiopian and independent cabdriver stopped Friday along Ninth Street Northwest, said he knew the drug is illegal in the United States but “when you go to Somalia or [an] African country, nobody bothers you.”

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Original article

(Posted on October 14, 2008)

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Comments

1 — Sid Moore wrote at 10:38 AM on December 26:

You have reported that 3000 pounds of dry khat was seized, but you neglected to report the disposition of the case. All five defendants got 12 months probation under the federal first offender act, completed their probation successfully, and had their cases dismissed by the United States District Court. The reason for this light treatment is that dry khat has a cathinone concentration of from zero to 36/10000000. An Ethiopian man was arrested recently in Fairfax for 47 grams of dry khat, which contained .00017 grams of the dreaded cathinone, a stimulant one seventh the strength of amphetamine. For sentencing purposes federal guidelines treat khat, whether fresh or dry, as 1/100 equivalent to marijuana. In other words, it takes 100 pounds of khat to equal 1 pound of marijuana. As for the health danger posed by khat, the Department of Health and Human Services has reported that there has only been one ER visit in the entire country, and that was in 1999. He probably choked on it. As for it being transported to Europe by “war lords” on their private planes, that simply isn’t true. It is shipped commercially as other products are, because khat is NOT internationally controlled. And as for it being used to fund terrorism in Somalia, that is a pure fabrication. Somalia does not grow khat, so none of the money from its production and sale winds up there. slm


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