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How Mexican cartels turned South Africas farms into meth production hubs

How Mexican cartels turned South Africas farms into meth production hubs

Johannesburg, South Africa – In the quiet mining town of Swartruggens, a small courthouse is preparing to decide whether five Mexicans accused of a major illegal drug operation will be granted bail or remain in custody.

Their arrests followed a raid on a remote farm in North West province, where police said they uncovered a large methamphetamine laboratory worth about one billion rand ($60m).

The case is one of several pointing to a pattern taking she in South Africa’s rural interior.

The Swartruggens laboratory was not an isolated discovery.

It was one of four major meth sites linked to Mexican criminals uncovered in South Africa in just two years, a pattern that has unsettled investigators and organised crime experts.

In 2024, police dismantled a large meth facility worth about $105–110 million on a farm near Groblersdal in Limpopo. Later that year, another laboratory worth roughly $5–6 million was discovered near Tshwane, followed by arrests last year in Mpumalanga.

Then came Swartruggens.

When police moved in on the North West farm in May, they found 481 kilos of methamphetamine, containers of chemicals and firearms. Among those arrested were Mexican nationals Fabian Astorga, Jesus Alonso Medina Astorga, Luis Alberto Ramirez Rios, Jose Andres Medina and Jacquelin Lopez Madrid, alongside co-accused South Africans.

All the sites followed the same pattern: remote farmland, long distances from towns and enough isolation for criminal activity to go undetected.

For investigators, the pattern is becoming harder to ignore.

Mexicans are increasingly being found working alongside local collaborators in rural production sites, suggesting a shift from trafficking meth into Africa to producing it there.

Organised crime researcher Julian Rademeyer told Al Jazeera the model reflects a deliberate strategy.

It’s quite a unique development where you have members of Mexican drug cartels franchising, moving chemists into remote rural areas and farms, he said.

The proach has been building for more than a decade, he added.

The logic is straightforward: produce closer to consumers, cut transport costs and reduce exposure to border and maritime enforcement.

How it spread

Mexican-linked networks in Africa did not begin in South Africa.

Researchers trace early activity back to Nigeria, where local groups were producing meth with Mexican involvement by around 2016.

From there, the networks spread through East Africa, then south through Mozambique and Botswana, before reaching South Africa more recently.

For years, users on the streets spoke of Mexican meth, often assumed to be imported. That supply chain has now shifted inward.

Now, basically, the cartel chemists are being sent here, Rademeyer told Al Jazeera.

Analysts say multiple supply routes now feed the South African market, but the most significant change is the rise of local production.

Who looks the other way

Methamphetamine dominates parts of South Africa’s illicit drug market because cheer drugs such as cocaine and heroin remain out of reach for many users, creating steady demand for a cheer, highly addictive stimulant.

Crime expert Willem Els says demand is only part of the story.

The main reason why manufacturing locally is lucrative to cartels is the local conditions that exist, where there is protection from corrupt police and politicians, he told Al Jazeera.

It is very lucrative. The cartels can make a lot of money because South African conditions result in undetected and protected operations.

A separate commission of inquiry into law enforcement has heard testimony alleging deep corruption within policing structures, including missing drug consignments and suspected inside involvement in major cases.

One case under scrutiny involves 541 kilos of cocaine seized in 2021 and later stolen from a police facility, in what investigators believe was an inside job.

Former Interpol ambassador Andy Mashiale told Al Jazeera the problem is visible on the ground.

There is no way in which police don’t know those labs, he said. So corruption plays a role.

He said officers deployed to rural areas were often aware of suspicious activity but failed to act.

What inspires the drug manufacturers or the drug cartels is the willingness of the police to enable the drug trade from hpening, he said.

South Africa’s elite Hawks unit says recent raids show progress in disrupting networks, while international partners, including the US Drug Enforcement Administration, have provided intelligence linking some suspects to the Sinaloa Cartel.

But investigators warn that the system behind the labs is resilient.

A frontier that keeps moving

US Africa Command officials have warned that Mexican cartels are now not only moving drugs through Africa, but also producing them on the continent.

For South Africa, the challenge is no longer just border control, it is institutional cacity, intelligence and corruption within the system meant to contain it.

Without deeper reform, analysts warn, the pattern is likely to continue: new farms, new labs, new chemists arriving quietly in rural provinces.

For the five men in Swartruggens, the question is immediate, whether they will be released.

For South Africa, the question is larger and more difficult: how to contain a trade that is no longer arriving at its borders, but taking root in the country.

Rademeyer says the structure is built to absorb disruption.

It’s a game of whack-a-mole, he told Al Jazeera. You seize a meth lab here, you seize a meth lab there. They’ll spring up elsewhere.

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Centre allays concerns over missing NHFS indicators, says fact sheets not final report

Centre allays concerns over missing NHFS indicators, says fact sheets not final report

Certain health indicators found missing in the recently released National Family Health Survey (NFHS)-6 fact sheet are a result of the government’s efforts toward data harmonisation, according to people familiar with the matter.

Centre allays concerns over ‘missing’ NHFS indicators, says fact sheets not final report

The fact sheets are designed to present the most policy-relevant headline findings while supporting efforts to streamline reporting across India’s growing network of specialised surveys and administrative databases, they said.

On reports regarding the absence of certain indicators, a senior official in the ministry of health and family welfare said, The objective is to ensure that each indicator is reported through the most propriate and authoritative source, reducing duplication and improving overall data coherence.

The evolution of the NFHS reporting framework reflects the growing maturity of India’s statistical architecture, where multiple specialised surveys and administrative databases increasingly complement one another to provide a more comprehensive, accurate and policy-relevant picture of the country’s development journey, the official added.

The official further said that several indicators cited as missing from the Fact Sheets are already being monitored through dedicated national systems. Sanitation and clean cooking fuel coverage, for instance, are tracked through specialised surveys and administrative platforms such as Swachh Survekshan Grameen and the ministry of statistics and programme implementation’s surveys, making duplication within the fact sheets unnecessary.

Similarly, key statistics relating to mortality, birth registration and population characteristics continue to be generated through established systems such as the Sample Registration System (SRS), Civil Registration System (CRS) and Census framework, which remain the country’s designated sources for these indicators.

On anaemia estimates, the official said that haemoglobin testing was not undertaken in NFHS-6 due to concerns surrounding the cillary blood sampling methodology used in previous rounds. Instead, anaemia prevalence estimates will be derived from the Indian Council of Medical Research’s Diet and Biomarkers Survey, which employs gold-standard venous blood sampling methods to improve accuracy and reliability.

Far from narrowing the survey’s scope, NFHS-6 has introduced several new indicators into the Fact Sheets, including population composition, elderly population share, financial inclusion, antenatal care utilisation, vaccination coverage, severe diarrhoeal disease prevalence and expanded breastfeeding indicators, said the official. The release of the NFHS-6 Fact Sheets marks an important milestone in India’s evolving health and statistical ecosystem, highlighting key gains in health, nutrition and population indicators while advancing the government’s broader efforts to harmonise national data systems, the official added.

The officials in the health ministry also said that the fact sheets are only the first stage of dissemination and should not be viewed as the comprehensive NFHS-6 national report, which will be released subsequently with a far wider range of indicators, detailed analyses and methodological documentation.

It will be presented in greater detail in the full National Report, including granular family planning indicators, selected child health interventions, further aspects related to women’s health and HIV-related findings. NFHS remains India’s largest and most comprehensive household health survey and continues to serve as a cornerstone for evidence-based policymaking, said the official cited above.

The official informed that the final national report is being prepared in consultation with technical experts, relevant ministries and development partners before its release.

The NFHS questionnaire undergoes periodic refinement to reflect emerging policy priorities while maintaining survey quality and reducing respondent burden. Such refinement is a globally accepted practice adopted by major household surveys worldwide, said the official.

The Fact Sheets are the first stage of dissemination. The detailed National Report will provide a much broader picture. The focus of NFHS-6 remains unchanged—delivering high-quality evidence to support better health outcomes and informed policymaking, the official added.

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Politics

Peru polls open in Keiko Fujimori, Roberto Sanchez presidential runoff

Peru polls open in Keiko Fujimori, Roberto Sanchez presidential runoff

Polls have opened in Peru’s presidential run-off, culminating an election season marred by confusion and protest.

Issues of crime, corruption and voter disillusionment following years of political turmoil loomed large over Sunday’s vote, which saw right-wing candidate and former first lady Keiko Fujimori face off with leftist congressmember Roberto Sanchez.

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Both are running to be the South American country’s ninth leader in a decade, with Peruvian leaders regular toppled by forced resignations or impeachment in recent years.

How the elections are administered will also be closely watched after logistical issues and a lengthy vote count challenged trust in the process during the first round of voting. The ril 12 election featured 35 candidates.

Following that vote, Fujimori easily asserted her place in two-person runoff with 17 percent of the vote, but it took weeks for Sanchez to be named her competitor with 12 percent support.

The third place candidate, far-right former mayor Rafael Lopez Aliaga, has alleged fraud in the count, although election monitors have found no evidence to back up the claim.

Speaking to news agency, voter Evelyn Pazos said she was hoping Sunday’s vote goes smoothly.

I hope the entire process is carried out transparently, that the people’s vote is respected, the 43-year-old said.

Hugo Vasquez, a craft seller in Lima, pointed to widespread disillusionment among the country’s 27 million voters.

There is a lot of disorder and corruption, and we’re going to vote, as always, for the ‘lesser evil’, the 67-year-old told the news agency.

A man votes during the presidential election runoff in Lima, Peru []

Fujimori and Sanchez have vowed vastly different visions of leadership.

The 51-year-old Fujimori, who was named first lady by her father, former right-wing President Alberto Fujimori, in the 1990s, has remained a defender of her family’s legacy.

Detractors have pointed to human rights abuses committed under the elder Fujimori, including the forced sterilisation of Indigenous people and extrajudicial killings carried out by death squads.

The president of the right-wing Popular Force party, which has controlled Congress for years, she has run on a tough-on-crime platform. That has included vows to defeat terrorism and impose a 60-day state of emergency.

Her candidacy has sparked a new protest movement in the final days of the race. Avictory would continue a trend of right-wing candidates being elected across the country.

Presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori addresses supporters during a closing campaign rally in Lima, Peru [Rodrigo Abd/The Associated Press]

The 57-year-old Sanchez, meanwhile, has styled himself in the likeness of former leftwing President Pedro Castillo.

He briefly served as foreign trade and tourism minister under Castillo, who was arrested and impeached in a failed bid to dissolve Congress in 2022.

Sanchez, a former psychologist, has sought to peal to rural and Indigenous voters in the country, vowing anti-poverty measures, police reform and what he has described as a new constitution built collectively, through dialogue and citizen participation.

Like Castillo, he has adopted wearing a wide-brimmed Chota hat on the campaign trail, a style common in Peru’s rural north.

Other pledges have included reparations for victims of Alberto Fujimori’s government and repealing laws that shield law enforcement and security forces from accountability.

Still, he has steered the centre in some of his economic policies, in an parent bid to court centrists, while promising to take on corruption in the police and judiciary, which he has said enables criminal networks.

Peruvian presidential candidate Roberto Sanchez addresses his supporters in Lima, Peru [Alessandro Cinque/]

Just hours before the election, a judge ruled Sanchez must stand trial on charges related to past financial irregularities in his party, in what his allies have condemned as interference in the vote.

While Keiko held a commanding lead in the first round of voting, observers have said a large segment of disaffected voters could make the difference in the runoff.

While every eligible voter is legally required to cast a ballot in Peru, about 7.16 million did not do so in the first round of voting.

About 12 percent of voters who did vote cast blank ballots, while about 5 percent cast spoiled ballots.

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Politics

David Lammy says he told JD Vance his Henry Nowak comments were wrong

David Lammy says he told JD Vance his Henry Nowak comments were wrong

When he was asked about the NPCC document, Lammy said “we are all equal before the law”, but added: “It is still the case that on arrest, on prosecution, conviction, I’m afraid in our prisons, ethnic minorities are disproportionately in the criminal justice system.”

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Anshul Kuncha, Hyderabad man shot dead in US, was a data expert: How weekend pizza delivery turned fatal

Anshul Kuncha, Hyderabad man shot dead in US, was a data expert: How weekend pizza delivery turned fatal

An Indian man named Anshul Kuncha was reportedly shot dead in the United States while delivering pizza in Pennsylvania’s Philadelphia earlier this week. The incident hpened on Friday midnight in North Philadelphia, according to local reports.

Anshul Kuncha was in the US to pursue his Master’s degree in Business and graduated in 2024. (Facebook @Anshul Kuncha)

Someone ordered a pizza and then shot the delivery person in the head, leading to his death, reported CBS news.

Who was Anshul Kuncha?

According to the LinkedIn profile, he was a data professional with experience across healthcare data, product compliance, operations analysis, and data management.

He described himself as being proficient in data and data visualisation software and someone who was always eager to embrace new challenges and opportunities for continuous skill development.

Also read | Indian man from Telangana called for pizza delivery, shot dead in US’ Philadelphia

He earned a Master’s degree in Business from Drexel University’s LeBow College of Business in Pennsylvania, United States, between September 2022 and March 2024. During his studies, he received the LeBow Alumni Merit Scholarship and developed skills in SQL, advanced statistics, and -related disciplines.

Prior to that, he completed a Bachelor of Technology (BTech) in Chemical Engineering from Chaitanya Bharathi Institute of Technology in India, where he was also associated with the university soccer team. Professionally, he worked as a Data Validation Analyst in the United States, including roles at DataBank IMX and Validation Associates LLC, as per his profile. Earlier, he served as a Data Management Coordinator at Echo Hospice.

He worked weekends on pizza delivery.

Before moving to the US, he worked in India as a Senior Product Compliance Analyst at Amazon and held Operations Analyst and Graduate Engineering Trainee positions at Jio Platforms Limited. He also completed professional certifications from the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP) and worked on projects such as an ple Stock Price Predictor, as per his LinkedIn page.

What hpened?

According to US media reports, Kuncha worked as a pizza delivery person on the weekends as a source of extra income. He was called to deliver pizzas to a vacant home at Raymond Rosen Homes, a housing complex in Philadelphia.

Also read |Don’t send your kids to the US’: Sister of Indian man shot dead in Philadelphia

In a CCTV footage ctured by the Philadelphia Housing Authority, the victim is seen walking with the pizza. He was then followed by two people wearing dark clothing and carrying backpacks.

“It was a tr. It was to kill him. I don’t know what they gained out of it or what intentions they had. They took my brother and killed him,” Kuncha’s sister told PTI, adding that his family were told that he was shot in the head three times and left on the road.

“We don’t have any suspicion…it’s a decoy. As per US media reports, it seems there were two gunmen wearing black masks with backpacks,” she added further.

Anshul’s sister sought justice and pealed to the Ministry of External Affairs to bring back the mortal remains of her brother.

She also shared a message for parents who are considering sending their children to the United States for further education and to build careers.

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