
BBC:
The customs officers at Brussels Airport were stunned. They had opened crates in the back of a lorry expecting to find a tonne of medical ketamine. But somewhere on its journey, the white powder had been switched for salt.
After zigzagging hundreds of miles across Europe, the contents of the consignment had been verified five days earlier by customs officers at Schipol Airport in the Netherlands, ready for its road trip to Belgium.
But somewhere between Amsterdam and Brussels the ketamine had vanished – the authorities believe most likely into the black market – replaced by the salt and freshly forged documents.
While it is not known where the drug ended up, and no-one responsible has been caught, this case shows the increasingly elaborate methods crime gangs are using to traffic ketamine across Europe and into the UK.
They exploit its classification in some countries as a legal medicine by transporting it across multiple borders to confuse the authorities. Consignments then disappear and are illegally sold as a hallucinogenic drug.
“It’s clear that criminal organisations are misusing all these long routes,” says Marc Vancoillie, head of Belgium’s central directorate of drugs.
Belgian investigators have uncovered at least 28 similar consignment switches – involving an estimated 28 tonnes of ketamine – since this case in 2023.