A pair of young Australian teens have been charged in a supposed plot to import 30 bricks of alleged cocaine wrapped in towels covered in vinegar and chilli.
The 18-year-old ladies, dressed in pink tracksuits, flew into Brisbane airport from Hong Kong on Thursday when they came by Australian Border Force (ABF) officers.
While examining their four luggage, officers allegedly discovered 30 bricks of cocaine covered in towels covered in vinegar and chilli.
The bricks supposedly contained a white compound which returned a positive presumptive test for drug.
Both of the teens were charged with one count of importing a business amount of a border-controlled compound.
Following examinations, cops jailed another two women, aged 23 and 21, at TK Maxx at the Brisbane Airport DFO on Thursday.
Police alleged the older women supplied directions relating to obtaining passports, airline company tickets and lodging.
The pair were charged with one count each of attempting to have a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug.

Australian Border Force officers carried out a random luggage check on Thursday and allegedly found bricks of drug in luggage of two tracksuit-clad teenagers
Two 18-year-old women, who were presumably in belongings of the travel luggage, were arrested
Two ladies in their 20s were detained at Brisbane airport's DFO on Thursday
It is alleged the older females arranged the journey and logistics (an arrest is envisioned)

All four ladies fronted Brisbane Magistrates Court on Friday where the Courier Mail recognized them as Hasna Abdula Muhamed and Caprice Seminara, both 18, Irada Yousif, 23, and Reem Musa Ahmed Abdelmoula, 22.

The court heard that Muhamed and Seminara were paid about $8,000 in the kind of an all-expenses paid journey to Vancouver to pick up and deliver designer clothing.
Commonwealth prosecutor Amelia Walker stated the worth of the supposed drug was approximated between $4.5 million and $9.9 million.
Defence legal representative Brendan Beavon told the court Yousif and Abdelmoula had called Muhamed through social media, with Yousif presumably saying she had contacts in the fashion market.
Muhamed, who was because of start her Bachelor of Psychology at Griffith University this week, has actually been allowed bail after she apparently informed authorities she believed the cases held designer clothes.
She should follow rigorous conditions including not getting in touch with Seminara, reporting 3 days a week to cops and stay in Australia.
The court heard that she will be combating her charge.
Seminara did not get bail and her matter was adjourned for an application on July 17.
Abdelmoula, a Doolandella architecture trainee, and Yousif, a Logan Reserve-based airport bartender, have actually been given bail with the exact same conditions as Muhamed.
Hong Kong