“A pigeon from Kamwokya flew all the way to Kitalya Prison and delivered some weed to one prisoner!”, imagine if one time we have such a story on one of Uganda’s dailies! But anyways, it has just happened in the British Columbia. Strange but true.
There was drama last week in one of the prisons Pacific Institution correctional facility which has a capacity of 500 inmates, for the first time in recent memory as a prison warden encountered and disarmed a pigeon in a prison facility after a long chase. The bird was carrying a backpack with a weed like substance sent for one of the anonymous housemates, according to CBC.
Pacific regional president of the Union for Canadian Correctional Officers, Randle said it was a routine day after the holidays at Pacific Institution in Abbotsford, B.C. on Dec. 29.2022. Officers were standing in one of the fenced inmate unit yards, which prisoners use regularly for hanging out, playing games or just getting some fresh air.
Then the officers noticed something strange: a grey bird with a small package on its back.
“From my understanding, it was tied to it in a similar fashion as like a little backpack,” Randle said.
“They had to corner it,” Randle said. “You can imagine how that would look, trying to catch a pigeon.”
After “a lengthy period of time,” the officers apprehended the bird, removed its cargo and set it free.
Randle said the package contained about 30 grams of crystal meth, which he described as a “fairly substantial” amount of the intensely addictive stimulant.
“It’s definitely scary with the fact that it was crystal meth that was found on the bird because that causes a whole lot of problems,” he added.
Corrections Canada confirmed in an email it is investigating, but would not provide further details.
In recent years, corrections officers have increasingly been on the lookout for drones dropping contraband into correctional facilities. Last month, a drone dropped a firearm into Mission Institution.
Since the drone crackdown, Randle said smugglers might be turning back to “old school” methods like pigeons or “throwover” — where someone outside lobs a package over the fence.
We haven’t heard of such similar incidents in Ugandan prison facilities except people dropping yellow painted pigs in parliament and nearby streets of Kampala.