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Laura Plummer: British woman jailed for carrying painkillers in Egypt will face criminal trial | Laura Plummer: British woman jailed for carrying painkillers in Egypt will face criminal trial |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Prosecutors in Egypt's Red Sea region have referred a British woman to trial before a criminal court for attempting to smuggle hundreds of powerful painkillers which are banned in the Arab country. | Prosecutors in Egypt's Red Sea region have referred a British woman to trial before a criminal court for attempting to smuggle hundreds of powerful painkillers which are banned in the Arab country. |
The woman, 33-year-old Laura Plummer from Hull, has maintained her innocence since her arrest last month on arrival from Britain to Hurghada, a Red Sea resort city. | |
She has insisted the Tramadol tablets were for her Egyptian partner, Omar Caboo, who suffers from chronic back pain. | |
Tramadol is listed by Egyptian authorities as an illegal drug given its wide use as a heroin substitute. | |
No date has yet been set for her trial. Convicted drug smugglers could face the death penalty in Egypt. | No date has yet been set for her trial. Convicted drug smugglers could face the death penalty in Egypt. |
At Saturday's hearing prosecutors renewed her detention for 15 days. | At Saturday's hearing prosecutors renewed her detention for 15 days. |
Held in a 15ft by 15ft cell with 25 other women for nearly a month, Ms Plummer faces a lengthy prison sentence if convicted. | |
Her local MP, Karl Turner, said Mr Caboo has provided evidence which proves he has a bad back, and therefore confirms that she was bringing the medication to Egypt for him. | |
A Foreign Office spokeswoman said its officials were "supporting a British woman and her family following her detention in Egypt". |
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