Abu Dhabi police busted 2 men trying to distribute 172 kgs of hashish

Drug use in the UAE has risen by 526 percent in the last 30 years.

Police in Abu Dhabi recently arrested two men for attempting to sell and distribute 172 kilograms of hashish in the UAE in a case now known as "The Poisons of Darkness," according to Gulf News.

Colonel Taher Ghareeb Al Dhaheri, director of Abu Dhabi's Police Drug Control department, said that "preliminary information" initiated the drug bust which ultimately led the police to the traffickers. 

The suspects were detained at their residence. They were found with 92 kgs of hashish, with another 80kg found in another emirate, half a kilo of opium and a pile of money of different currencies.

Drug use in the UAE

In an article published by The National in 2014, a study revealed that drug use in the UAE has risen by 526 percent in the last 30 years. 

Such a high statistic rings true, despite the fact that in 2008, the UAE was listed as the country with the "longest list of banned substances," according to The Guardian.

The list includes commonly found drugs such as anti-depressants and codeine.

Drug addiction costs the UAE 5.5 billion dirhams each year, as revealed by The National.

However, in recent years, the war on drugs in the UAE has intensified. Police have jointly collaborated with various institutions to combat substance abuse.

In 2016, Dubai Police’s Anti-Narcotics Department launched a six-minute video titled "A Soul's Tale" on social media with the sole purpose of combating drug use. 

Amended anti-drug law in UAE

In 2016, the narcotics law in the UAE was amended. The changes saw prison sentences reduced to 2 years, down from 4 years in previous years. 

Judicial authorities were also given other options when dealing with drug users. This includes fining violators and sending them to rehabilitation facilities instead of imprisoning them. 

Since the law came into effect, more than 100 drug users have come forward voluntarily or whose families have turned them in for help, according to The National.

Muslims are not fully human, Swedish politician says

"If you are an ex-Muslim you have come quite far towards being fully human."
Martin Strid
Martin Strid

A Swedish politician has been forced to resign after saying that Muslims are not fully human.

"On one end of the scale, you are 100 percent human, a person, everything that’s part of that concept. At the other end, you are 100 percent Mohammedan," Martin Strid, who was part of the Sweden Democrats party until his resignation this week, said, according to The Local

"All Muslims are somewhere on that scale," Strid said, arguing that members of terror organizations "are close to being 100 percent Mohammedan".

"If you are an ex-Muslim you have come quite far towards being fully human," he said.

So, according to Strid, a Muslim can only hope to become almost "fully human" after they reject their religious beliefs entirely. Because logic?

A mosque in Sweden
A mosque in Sweden

Fortunately, others in Strid's political party were quick to condemn the remarks and distance themselves from his Islamophobic position.

The secretary of the Sweden Democrats party, Richard Jomshof, called the comments exactly what they are, racist.

"Everyone has fundamental human worth, the same for everyone. If you think that someone has a worse value based on a certain skin color or the community they are part of, that is racism for me. We will not accept that," said Jomshof, according to The Independent.

Aron Emilsson, an MP and board member of the Sweden Democrats also criticized Strid's deeply offensive comments.

"It is a statement we, from the party leadership, take a clear distance from. Categorising people and human values based on what religious beliefs you have is a way we cannot argue," Emilsson said, according to SVT

“It is contrary to our basic view of human dignity.”

For his part, Strid offered what appeared to be an attempt at an apology, saying: "It was very unfortunate and I expressed myself very clumsily".

He also tried to justify himself by saying he has Muslim friends...

"I know a lot of Muslims and am good friends with a lot. People are people, of course," he said.

Hours later, The Local reported that he had quit his political party.

On social media, many are expressing their concerns

Some name calling...

#Sad

Islamophobic politicians and political movements are on the rise across Europe.

Some 60,000 demonstrators from Poland – and across Europe – joined a massive demonstration against immigrants, refugees, and the religion of Islam earlier this month.

Among the signs carried at the rally were xenophobic messages such as: "Clean Blood." "White Europe." "Refugees Get Out!" "Pray for an Islamic Holocaust."