(AFP)
LONDON — A court in London on Thursday jailed an Ethiopian diplomat for trying to smuggle a large stash of cannabis through London’s Heathrow Airport.
Amelework
Wondemagegne, an official at the Ethiopian embassy in Washington, had
tried to claim diplomatic immunity when she was caught at the airport in
April with 56 kilograms (123 pounds) of cannabis.
But Isleworth Crown Court in west London jailed her for 33 months after she admitted one count of drug smuggling.
The court had found that the 36-year-old was not entitled to immunity.
And
judge Richard McGregor-Johnson told her: “The fact that you smuggled
these drugs in the expectation that you would not be prosecuted if you
were caught because of your diplomatic status is a significant factor in
this case.”
Wondemagegne, a mother of two, initially said a man
had given her three suitcases containing the packages of cannabis before
she left Addis Ababa airport for Heathrow.
She had said she had believed the packages contained meat and spices.
But judge McGregor-Johnson said Wondemagegne had told “a pack of lies”.
The quantity of cannabis she had tried to smuggle was “substantial”, he added.
“You knew perfectly well what you were doing…,” he told her.
Wondemagegne’s
two children, aged 10 and 17, are being cared for by the staff of the
Ethiopian embassy in Washington as her husband died of cancer in 2005.
She will be deported from Britain after serving her sentence.
Police
said the slabs of cannabis in the suitcases, which had been sprinkled
with chili powder, had a street value of £160,000 ($249,000, 203,000
euros).
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