Tag: smuggling

  • US tourist faces jail in Turkey for collecting beach ‘stones’

    US tourist faces jail in Turkey for collecting beach ‘stones’

    An American tourist who collected stones during a six-day beach holiday with his wife was briefly detained in Turkey and faces trial for attempting to smuggle historical artifacts, he said on Wednesday.

    turkey_beach_istock

    Jason Dement was taken into custody by security officials at Antalya airport, near Turkey’s Mediterranean coast, on Sunday because two of the pieces inside a bag of stones appeared to be artifacts. On Monday, a court released him from custody but barred him from leaving Turkey.

    His lawyer said Dement, 30, from Purvis, Mississippi, faces prosecution under strict Turkish laws against the smuggling of artifacts. Turkey has broad definitions about what constitutes historical artifacts and Fatma Zuhre Akinci, the lawyer, said a museum report confirmed the pieces picked out by the security officials to be artifacts.

    The report, cited in court papers, did not say precisely what the pieces may have been or say how old they may be, Akinci said.

    Dement said he and his wife, Sheila, have a habit of collecting stones as souvenirs. One of stones was a triangular-shaped rough marble piece that looked as though it came from a modern building.

    The other was a slanted, 5-inch long, brick-colored piece that had been washed by the sea and looked like it could have been old masonry.

    “It had no inscription,” Dement told The Associated Press by telephone from a hotel in Antalya. “It came from an ordinary beach. There were no historical sites around, no ancient ruins.”

    Dement, a former soldier, is a civilian employee at the Katterbach U.S. Army base in Germany. His wife, who is also employed at the base was not detained and was allowed to board the plane for Germany on Sunday.

    On a blog he created seeking help to cover his costs while in Turkey, Dement said: “The judge is awaiting an official report from a museum historian that will weigh in on the true value of the ‘artifact’ …. and this will be a huge factor in the next phase of my court struggle.”

    The punishment for smuggling ancient artifacts is up to 12 years in prison.

    via US tourist faces jail in Turkey for collecting beach ‘stones’ | Fox News.

  • Turkey, Germany arrest Iranians in nuclear smuggling scheme

    Turkey, Germany arrest Iranians in nuclear smuggling scheme

    Germany and Turkish security officials have caught smugglers suspected of transporting nuclear materials from India to the Iranian city of Arak, overseas media reports.

    Ynet News says the security officials conducted a simultaneous raid in Germany and in Istanbul. The raid led to several arrests: A Turkish citizen who was born in Iranian was found with documents that detailed the smuggling and was arrested in Istanbul. And another Iranian suspect was detained and arrested at Ataturk Airport. German police, meanwhile, are holding five Iranian suspects, Ynet says.

    Two other suspects are at-large. Ynet reports that Turkish customs officials raided the home of an Iranian couple suspected of involvement in the smuggling operation. But the two weren’t at the house, and police are still seeking their whereabouts, Ynet says.

    via Turkey, Germany arrest Iranians in nuclear smuggling scheme – Washington Times.

  • gulfnews : Two arrested for rare tulip smuggling

    gulfnews : Two arrested for rare tulip smuggling

    Officials seize a total of 160 different endemic species out of 5,236 plant seeds the two men, aged 60 and 29, had in their vehicle

    By Habib Toumi, Bahrain Bureau Chief

    Manama: Turkish police have arrested two Dutch nationals at the Kapıkule border crossing between Turkey and Bulgaria for allegedly attempting to smuggle out 57 rare tulip bulbs, the Anatolia news agency said.

    According to the agency, officials seized a total of 160 different endemic species out of the 5,236 plant seeds the two men, aged 60 and 29, had in their vehicle. The seizure is the largest alleged attempt to smuggle plants out of Turkey in the country’s history.

    Officials discovered numerous different plant species in small pots, a hidden compartment full of plant seeds, as well as tulip bulbs that had been concealed by newspapers. The vehicle was sent for an X-ray inspection, the agency said. The two men said they were taking the seeds to use in their own garden.

    Experts from Trakya University’s Biology Department said that the confiscated plants, especially the upside-down tulip (Fritillaria Michailovskyi) which is only grown in the eastern province of Erzurum and the eastern district of Şemdinli in Hakkari, were endemic species and their export was illegal.

    The Fritillaria Michailovskyi is also known as the Adıyaman Lalesi in Turkey.

    The tulip bulbs and the other endemic species were sent to the Yalova Atatürk Garden Culture Center Institute following the men’s detention, Hurriyet Daily News reported on Sunday.

    A total of 57 “upside-down” tulip bulbs were allegedly seized from the vehicle. The two Dutch men were allegedly seen by Artvin Çoruh University students while they were collecting plants in Artvin’s Kafkasör area, near to Erzurum.

    Erdal Kaya, a Turkish botanical expert, said plant smuggling was one of the biggest problems that Turkey was currently experiencing and that there were only 57 upside-down tulip bulb species in the world, making them at risk of becoming extinct.

    Kaya said other countries’ plant seeds were also in danger and added that the Dutch pair had allegedly stolen species from Macedonia, Greece, Bulgaria, Iran, Syria and Georgia.

    According to the expert, tulip bulbs are very valuable and are used in cancer and Alzheimer research.

    “A total of 19 endemic plant species are under protection, and the upside-down tulip bulb is among them,” he said.

    via gulfnews : Two arrested for rare tulip smuggling.