ERBIL, Kurdistan Region of Iraq - An Iraqi court on Monday sentenced a drug trafficker to life imprisonment after he was caught in possession of 30,000 amphetamine pills.
The Anbar criminal court issued the sentence on Monday saying that the convict “was found in possession of 30,000 amphetamine pills with the intent to trade and sell them among users,” according to Iraqi state media.
The sentence was issued under Article 28 of the Iraqi Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Law, the statement added.
The Article says that any individual charged with "exporting, importing, producing, or planting narcotic substances” should face death sentence or life imprisonment.
Iraq, with its extensive borders with Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait, has evolved from a transit route to a significant drug consumption market.
Despite consecutive government cabinet pledges to fight the drug phenomena in the country and Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani having ordered the establishment of rehabilitation centers across all Iraqi provinces, the country’s infrastructure is still too weak to combat the rapid increase in drug use.
Last week, another Iraqi court sentence two people to life imprisonment after they were caught in possession of 1,460 narcotic pills.
In late December, Iraq’s General Directorate of Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances revealed that security forces were able to arrest a total of 14,438 suspects on drug-related charges in 2024, in addition to confiscating six tons and 183 kilograms of narcotics.
A total of 144 death sentences were issued for suspected drug traffickers in 2024, and 454 others were sentenced to perpetual imprisonment (20 years in Iraqi law), according to the directorate. At least 11 drug suspects were killed, and 33 were wounded in clashes with security forces, the directorate added, also reporting three deaths and 31 injuries among its ranks during that same period.
Despite imposing severe penalties, Iraq continues to struggle with an escalating drug problem that has intensified since the US invasion in 2003.
Iraq’s stringent narcotics laws, imposing death or life sentences for drug-related offenses, are a response to the severity of the crisis but have yet to curb increasing drug use and trafficking fully.