Pubdate: Thu, 18 Mar 2010 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www2.canada.com/calgaryherald/letters.html Website: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Jason Van Rassel BRITONS CHARGED AFTER NARCOTICS SEIZED AT AIRPORT Flight Originated in United Kingdom, Where Khat Is Legal Two Britons have been charged with importing a controlled substance after border agents at the Calgary airport seized 31 kilograms of khat - -- a drug that's allowed in many other countries but is illegal in Canada. Canada Border Services Agency officers made the find Saturday after inspecting the luggage of two women who arrived on a flight from London, England. Khat is a plant that can have a mild hallucinogenic effect when its leaves are chewed. It's legal in the United Kingdom, where the flight originated. But once someone enters Canada, the only laws that apply to khat are ours, said an RCMP spokesman. "Anyone coming here has to understand . . . what may be legal in other countries may not be legal here," said Sgt. Patrick Webb. Khat is grown mainly in Kenya, Ethiopia, Yemen and Somalia. Police said demand for it here is fuelled mainly by immigrants from those countries. "We're seeing immigrants from Africa who have had (khat) in the past," Webb said. Chewing khat can produce feelings of euphoria and increased alertness, but authorities warn that excessive consumption can cause slurred speech, staggering and violence. Webb estimated local authorities make 10 or 12 khat seizures every year, and that demand may be growing as the local population of people from countries where khat is common increases. Last month, Calgary had a similar incident with doda, a drug made from dried and ground seed pods taken from opium poppies grown in countries such as Afghanistan and India. Police seized 13 kilograms of doda and 60 kilograms of unprocessed seed pods from a northeast Calgary grocery store selling South Asian specialties. The difference, however, is several nations have signed a United Nations treaty that makes doda also illegal in its countries of origin. In connection with Saturday's seizure at the airport, Melinda Zsuzsanna Meszaros, 36, and Katalin Racsko, 56, both of London, have been charged with importation of a controlled substance. They appeared in court Tuesday, and were remanded in custody. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake