The security services in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, arrested a pharmacist on charges of killing her child with narcotic pills "Blue Elephant", drugs prohibited and internationally prohibited, and then claimed that the girl died by mistakenly taking those drugs.

The mabahith besieged the accused and admitted the details of the incident.

Nozha police station received a report from a housewife in which she reported the death of her 6-year-old daughter, Camelia, due to accidentally taking narcotic pills, and the prosecution was notified.

Investigations showed that the pharmacy put her daughter blue elephant pills in the juice with the intention of killing her, according to investigations and investigations detective, which also pointed out that the accused separated from the child's father for nearly a year, and that she is married to another and suffers from mental illnesses that forced her to get rid of her child.

The drugs "blue elephant" that killed the girl Camellia, her scientific name, "dimethyl tryptamine", resulting in a hallucination of visual and auditory short and ecstasy and a sense of change, according to "medical news today" medical.

These crystal-shaped pills fall into the family of tryptamines, known as hallucinogenic pills, which mainly work on brain chemistry and hormones in the body.

The latest scientific studies have shown that 75% of people who take these pills commit suicide or die suddenly, and 25% suffer from serious psychological problems, as it starts after 20 seconds after taking it and lasts about 3 hours.

These hallucinogenic pills also occur, a condition called "serotonin syndrome," which presents a potentially fatal health hazard associated with its use.

Once these drugs are taken, humans see things and hear voices that do not actually exist, and are connected in tune with what happens in the past and the future.