Shenzhen Customs finds 11.5 kilograms of meth in carpets from Middle East

Shenzhen Customs in Guangdong province recently discovered 11.5 kilograms of methamphetamine hidden inside carpets shipped from the Middle East.
The shipment was declared as carpets, but X-ray images revealed irregular suspicious breakpoints. During a physical inspection, officers initially found no significant anomalies. However, samples taken using toothpicks tested positive for methamphetamine.
Upon further examination, customs officers conducted a partial minimally invasive dismantling and discovered transparent plastic tubes filled with white powder hidden within the carpets' weave. Reagent testing confirmed the substance was methamphetamine, weighing over 11.5 kilograms.
Shenzhen Post Customs noted that the postal delivery channel, with its extensive network, separation of people and goods, and strong concealment characteristics, has become a hotspot for drug smuggling.
Hiding drugs within items such as books, cosmetics, and food products is a common method of concealment in express shipments. Some methods are even more discreet, such as cocaine hidden in clothes hangers, marijuana concealed in hard drives, and mephedrone stashed inside canned creams.
- China's lunar exploration achieves systematic progress, says chief designer
- PLA launches exercises in Taiwan Strait
- Qingming: Remembering roots
- Beijing Library selected as The World's Greatest Places of 2025
- Chinese mainland condemns Taiwan for expelling mainland spouses
- China launches four experimental satellites