Wednesday, 29 October 2014

Spain detains top drug trafficker after cocaine found with bananas


A pile of bananas seen in Tangerang, Indonesia, on March 1, 2013

A pile of bananas
 
Madrid - Spanish police said Wednesday they had arrested nine people, including one of the country's biggest drug smugglers, after finding cocaine hidden among a shipment of bananas from Colombia.
The authorities said they opened their investigation after police with sniffer dogs uncovered 54 kilos (120 pounds) of high quality cocaine hidden inside boxes of bananas as they were being unloaded at the port of Marin in the northwestern region of Galicia.
Officers arrested six people who came to pick up the cocaine as well as three others in the southern town of Dilar who were allegedly part of the ring that organised the shipment, a statement said.
The detainees included the leader of the drug smuggling ring, identified only as Antonio Manuel B.I., a Spanish national described by police as "one of Spain's top drug dealers".
Police said the suspect had been on the run since being sentenced to 17 years in jail in 2006 for drug smuggling and other crimes.
He was detained in Spain in 2001 on suspicion of being part of a ring trying to smuggle more than 1,000 kilos of cocaine out of Colombia.
"In addition to using false documents, technological systems to prevent his communications from being intercepted and bodyguards, he also frequently changed his physical appearance," the statement said.
Three other Spaniards were arrested along with a Russian, a Colombian, an Argentinian, a Peruvian and a Mexican in the probe into the cocaine found in the banana shipment.
Spain's proximity to north Africa, a major source of hashish, and its close ties with its former colonies in Latin America, a key cocaine producing region, have made it a major gateway into Europe for drug traffickers.

No comments:

Post a Comment