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Canadians charged after 16 kg of meth found stashed in suitcases, Australian police say

Two Canadians who flew from Vancouver to Melbourne are facing serious drug charges after Australian border officials allegedly found a significant amount of methamphetamine stashed inside their suitcases.

Baggage X-ray at Melbourne Airport revealed drugs in the lining of several suitcases, statement says

Australian Federal Police said an X-ray revealed packages of methamphetamine stashed inside the lining of four suitcases belonging to two Canadians who flew from Vancouver to Melbourne on Feb. 29. (Australian Border Force)

Two Canadians are facing serious drug charges in Australia after border officials allegedly found a significant amount of methamphetamine stashed inside their suitcases.

The pair, a man and a woman in their 20s, flew from Vancouver to Melbourne Airport on Saturday. They were pulled aside for additional screening based on an officer's "intuition," according to a statement Tuesday.

Australian Federal Police said border officers searched the pair's four bags. Four one-kilogram packages of meth were allegedly found inside each suitcase, for a total of 16 kilograms of the drug.

The man, 27, and woman, 26, have now been charged with importation of a commercial quantity of a border-controlled drug and two counts of possessing a commercial quantity of a border-controlled drug.

The maximum penalty is life in prison.

The statement did not provide the Canadians' names.

Australian Federal Police said 16 kilograms of methamphetamine were found in the linings of four suitcases belonging to two travellers from Vancouver. (Australian Border Force)

Heavy bags led to X-ray: police

The drugs were discovered after an officer noticed one of the man's bags seemed unusually heavy, even after being emptied for the search. The statement said the officer sent it for an X-ray, which revealed the packages inside the bags.

"Similar discrepancies were found with the suitcases of the female passenger," said Craig Palmer, a regional commander with the the Australian Border Force.

The statement said the drugs tested positive for meth.

The man and woman remain in custody. They are due to appear in Victoria Magistrate's Court in Australia on May 22.