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    Home » Buddhist Monks Caught Smuggling $3.6M in Weed Through Sri Lanka
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    Buddhist Monks Caught Smuggling $3.6M in Weed Through Sri Lanka

    adminBy adminApril 28, 202603 Mins Read0 Views
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    Buddhist Monks Caught Smuggling .6M in Weed Through Sri Lanka
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    Sri Lankan authorities arrested 22 individuals after uncovering a sophisticated cannabis trafficking operation involving Buddhist monks carrying over 220 pounds of weed hidden under their robes. The case raises questions about recruitment tactics, deception, and the exploitation of religious trust in organized drug networks.

    Buddhist monks with pounds and pounds of weed, carefully distributed under their long orange robes, attempted to pass through Colombo airport in Sri Lanka. 

    No, it’s not the opening scene of a work of fiction. It’s a real-life incident that ended with 22 arrests, more than 220 pounds of cannabis seized, and a shipment valued at $3.6 million.

    An Operation Straight Out of a Movie Script

    The discovery took place at Sri Lanka’s main international airport, where customs agents detected irregularities in the luggage of a group of monks who had arrived from Thailand, according to Euronews. What appeared to be a routine religious trip was, in fact, a carefully coordinated trafficking operation.

    The suitcases had false bottoms. Inside were transparent bags containing suspected plant material that turned out to be cannabis and hashish. The drugs weren’t confined to a single bag but strategically distributed—each person carried their share.

    “Each monk was carrying about 5 kilograms of plant material suspected to be narcotics. In total, 112 kilograms,” a customs spokesperson explained.

    The shipment is valued at around $3.6 million, suggesting an organized network rather than an isolated attempt.

    Recruitment, Deception, and Logistics

    Behind the striking image—monks turned “mules”—lies a more complex structure. According to early investigations, three of those arrested allegedly coordinated the operation from a temple in Jamburaliya, on the outskirts of Colombo.

    The rest of the group, mostly young trainees, were reportedly recruited via Facebook with promises of paid travel, lodging, and food. According to initial reports, they believed they were transporting educational materials and candy for schoolchildren. The gap between that explanation and what they were actually carrying is what ultimately defines the case.

    Not everyone knew… or at least that’s what authorities are now trying to determine. That point—the actual level of awareness among those involved—remains a key unknown in the investigation.

    Religion, Trust, and Suspicion

    There’s something both uncomfortable and opportunistic about this scene: the use of a religious figure as cover. Buddhist monks are not just individuals within a spiritual structure; they represent social trust, discipline, even a certain idea of “purity” in the public imagination. Using that image as a shield not only aims to evade scrutiny but also capitalizes on that social perception.

    But an airport is not a temple. And the logic of enforcement doesn’t distinguish between symbols.

    The 22 detainees were placed in pretrial detention after appearing before the Negombo Magistrate’s Court, while the investigation aims to reconstruct the full network: who financed it, who was meant to receive it, and where the shipment was ultimately headed.

    Cover photo created with AI.

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