A general view of Hong Kong’s Stanley Prison. Tanzanian ambassador to China Abdulrahman Shimbo is accused by drug mules imprisoned here of warning them to stop the campaign to deter other Tanzanians keen on drug trafficking. PHOTOS | FILE
Dar es Salaam/Hong Kong. Tanzania’s ambassador
to China, Lt General (rtd) Abdulrahman Shimbo, is on the spot following
claims he had “threatened” Tanzanian drug mules jailed in Hong Kong.
The China Morning Post reported yesterday that the
ambassador is being accused by the inmates of allegedly telling them to
end a campaign waged from prison to deter others from the illicit
trade.
This was in relation to a visit that Lt Gen Shimbo
made to Stanley Prison in Hong Kong last month. Some 109 Tanzanians are
being held there for drug trafficking and related offences. According
to the newspaper’s Sunday edition, the envoy warned that the prisoners’
families could suffer unless they ended the campaign which they say is
meant to alert others to avoid a similar fate.
However, the reports have been vehemently denied by a spokesperson at the Tanzanian embassy in China.
Mr Edmund Kitokezi, an official at the embassy in
Beijing, who was quoted in the same report, denied the ambassador had
threatened the inmates. Instead, he said, Mr Shimbo had encouraged them
to speak up.
“We are positive about the campaign–this is the
government’s position. It’s not the embassy’s job to tell anyone to
stop,” Mr Kitokezi told Chinese newspaper. “Communications should
continue,” he said, adding that Tanzania is committed to fighting
illicit drugs trade.
The arrest of scores of drug mules last year -- at
a rate of five or six per week, at times -- aaded up to over 100
Tanzanian inmates in the city, more than any other territory in China.
Fearing more of their countrymen would be lured
into the drug trade, some inmates began writing letters home, warning
potential couriers to think twice. The campaign was championed by
Catholic Priest Father John Wotherspoon, a Hong Kong prison chaplain who
published many of the letters on his website, V2Catholic.com.
The matter was soon picked up by Tanzanian media
and the move is credited for helping stem the flow of the mules, with
only 15 arrested in the past year, according to Father Wotherspoon.
But Mr Shimbo’s visit to the Hong Kong prison has
opened a can of worms, with some inmates claiming he left them feeling
“threatened”.
“He told the prisoners to cease their campaigns
and warned them their families could be in danger, according to letters
written by the prisoners and seen by the Sunday Morning Post,” the
newspaper reported.
“The visit of our ambassador was like a disaster to us,” wrote Gervas, a Stanley Prison inmate.
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