A Bangladeshi court yesterday sent a female cricketer to two-days’ police custody after she was arrested with 14,000 pills of popular drug yaba, as methamphetamine is widely known in Asia, a senior police officer said.
Consumption of yaba is booming in Bangladesh, with seizures alone jumping more than 2,500% to 29.4mn pills in 2016 compared with 2011. Government officials say the business is worth an estimated $3bn annually.
Following a tip-off, police arrested Nazrin Khan Mukta, 23, in the southeastern city of Chittagong with the yaba tablets in her backpack as she was leaving for the capital Dhaka on Sunday.
“The metropolitan magistrate court granted two days’ remand following an appeal for five days’ remand by police,” said Nirmolendu Bikash Chowdhury, an assistant 
commissioner of police.
Nur Mohammad, lawyer for Mukta, said they will seek bail.
Police said Mukta, a student of a state-run university who plays in the Dhaka Premier League, admitted that she sourced the yaba from the nearby district of Cox’s Bazar to sell it in Dhaka in association with some others.
Cox’s Bazar is a coastal district neighbouring Myanmar, factories in the northeastern part of which, according to analysts, are pushing yaba towards Bangladesh.
Narcotics officials say a yaba pill can be bought for around 60 taka ($0.714) in Cox’s Bazar but retails for around 300 taka in Dhaka.




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