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Drug Smuggling  in Korea on the riSe Korea’s illicit drug trade is at an all-time  high, with a record amount of drugs smug- gled into the country in the first half of this  year, according to a report released yester- day by the Korea Customs Service.  According to the report, law enforcement  officials  seized  51.8  kilograms  of  illicit  drugs worth 119.5 billion won from Janu- ary through June.  The amount was a record high and repre- sented a 61 percent increase compared to  the previous period. The number of detect- ed drug-smuggling cases stood at 153, a 20  percent jump from the same period in 2013.  The authorities said that methampheta- mine accounted for the largest share (40.4  kilograms) of drugs seized, followed by syn- thetic cannabis (9.2 kilograms) and pure  marijuana (1.8 kilograms). The amount of  methamphetamine smuggled within the  past six months has already surpassed the  total for all of 2013.  Officials attributed the surge, in part, to  one case in which smugglers were caught  with a haul of meth that was stored in a  cargo ship from China. The shipment con- tained 6.1 kilograms of meth with a street  value of 18.3 billion won.  The  customs  office  uncovered  the  case  on June 1 in Gohyeon Port in Geoje, South  Gyeongsang. It also pointed to the increas- ing use of international mail in delivering  illegal drugs, as more Koreans buy illegal  substances from foreign websites and have  them delivered by regular post straight to  their doors. The number o f international parcels that  contain drugs increased to 108 during the  first half of this year from 74 over the same  period last year.  Korea has a reputation as a country that is  largely free of narcotics, and drug traffick- ing is generally considered a minor concern.  However, the nation has seen a rise in drug  trafficking cases in recent years. The num- ber of drug-smuggling cases uncovered by  the Korea Customs Service rose from 150 in  2009 to 232 in 2012. Acknowledging the recent rise, the agency  vowed to root out illicit drug trading. “We  will strengthen the monitoring of interna- tional parcels and increase the number of  drug-detection dogs at ports and the inter- national airports,” the customs office said. all stories are culled with consent from Korea Joongang Daily’s website and edited by groove Korea for length and clarity.  the opinions expressed here do not necessarily represent those of groove Korea. — ed. n a t i o n a l   n e w Swith August 2014   /  www.koreajoongangdaily.com man threatenS immolation  inSiDe ramaDa hotel A hostess bar owner threatened to commit  suicide by setting a fire in a guest room in  the Ramada Seoul Hotel in the posh Gang- nam District, and police scrambled to stop  him for 11 hours.  Around 6 p.m., police were told that a  strong smell of gasoline was coming from  a seventh floor guest room in the hotel in  Samseong-dong, southern Seoul.  A 49-year-old man surnamed Park, whose  hostess bar in the hotel’s basement had  been shut temporarily on grounds of being  a den of prostitution, poured 20 liters of  gasoline around the hotel room and threat- ened to set himself on fire unless he was  taken  to  meet  Moon  Byung-wook,  chair- man of the Ramada Group, formerly called  the Sun and Moon Group. Police negotiators  communicated with Park via the phone in  the room and cellphone, trying to persuade  him to turn himself in.  Nearly 200 hotel guests and staff were  evacuated from the building. Around 100  firefighters were on standby along with 22  fire trucks, and roads were blocked off to  prepare for an emergency scenario.  A conflagration was averted when Park fi- nally turned himself in the following morn- ing around 4:50 a.m. He was arrested by  police for obstructing the hotel’s business  and fire code violations.  According to police, Park managed a host- ess bar in the basement of the hotel be- tween 2005 and May 2012, when he was  accused of recruiting prostitutes and forced  to suspend business for two months.  Park continued to run the business even  after the lease with the hotel ended in 2012,  but  he  reportedly  had  difficulty  meeting  the monthly rent. He eventually became  embroiled in a n eviction lawsuit against  the hotel, and in February, the court ruled  against Park.  Ramada  Hotel  was  involved  in  a  crack- down on prostitution from 2005 to 2012,  and  in  January,  Chairman  Moon  was  charged with running a prostitution busi- ness that made 7 billion won in profit.  In the suit against Moon, Park had been  accused of being an accomplice to Moon in  running the prostitution business, which  took place in his hostess bar and in guest  rooms upstairs. He claimed he was not in- volved and was merely a tenant of the hotel. Park told police yesterday that the hotel  management told him that if he accepted  the court ruling in February, it would pay  him compensation and take care of his em- ployees’ overdue wages, “but they did not  keep their promise.”  www.groovekorea.com / August 2014 28