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BIG OPIUM HAUL.

RECORD SEIZURE IN SYDNEY. TOTAL VALUE £15,000. Sydney, May 1. Nearly 1500 tins of opium, valued roughly at £15,000, for the drug sells at £lO a tin, were found by customs officers on the steamer Arafura, which arrived from Eastern porta this week. It was the biggest haul that has ever been made in Australia, and, for that matter, it is probable that nd bigger haul has been made in the world. Customs officers could not believe at first that all the small tins they found really contained opium, as they did not think that the traffickers would be so bold as to endeavour to land such a quantity from the one steamer. Prowling about near the part of the ship where the opium was found, the searchers noticed an anxious-looking Chinese, one of the crew of the steamer. He was questioned, and as a result of something he told the officers, was arrested. Not many minutes after the steamer had been moored to the wharf, inspector Clifford, of the Customs Department, Chief-Searcher G. Brown, and 12 other Customs officials, boarded the Arafura, and commenced a search for contraband cargo. They had almost completed their search without finding anything to arouse suspicion, when one of the searchers who was proding under the chain locker in the forepeak of the vessel with a stick, felt something soft. The anchor was probing under the chain locker in the locker could not be extracted until the anchor was lowered. At the request of Inspector Clifford this was done, and the officers found that the locker was stacked with cases, tins, casks, and bags, and these, on being opened, were found to contain the opium. Not many pe'dple on the steamer knew of the sensational discovery that had been made, and the opium was quietly lowered into the Customs launch and removed to the Customs House. There are men in Sydney recognised as being “respectable citizens,” who, it is asserted, have built fine homes for themselves out of money made in thQ infamous trade. They run a big risk, bu x the profits are big. These “masters” of trade are not the men who suffer when the police or Customs officials confiscate opium or make arrests. It is their agents who pay the penalty: But the agents make good money, too, and they also are prepared to run the risks. So big are the operations o( these men that the great haul made on the Arafura will not dismay them. They are prepared for such things, and will continue tc carry on. “Where does all the opium come from?” is a question often asked. The police knew that most of it comes from Chinese and Japanese ports, but ther* aie many islands in the East, whee it is smuggled on board steamers. The terrible feature of the whole business it that not only Chinese, but white men and women smoke opium in this country. Day by day the evil is getting worse, and if the traffic is to |be stopped immediate and drastic action must be taken. The opium which was contained in 10 sacks, was subsequently burned by the customs authorities in the Moore Park incinerator.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19250514.2.44

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 14 May 1925, Page 7

Word Count
536

BIG OPIUM HAUL. Taranaki Daily News, 14 May 1925, Page 7

BIG OPIUM HAUL. Taranaki Daily News, 14 May 1925, Page 7