News (Media Awareness Project) - Panama: Panamanian Police Seize 19 Tons Of Cocaine In One Of |
Title: | Panama: Panamanian Police Seize 19 Tons Of Cocaine In One Of |
Published On: | 2007-03-20 |
Source: | Mainichi Daily News (Japan) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 10:22:27 |
PANAMANIAN POLICE SEIZE 19 TONS OF COCAINE IN ONE OF BIGGEST MARITIME
BUSTS ON RECORD
PANAMA CITY, Panama -- Panamanian police seized a boat off the
nation's Pacific coast carrying 19.4 metric tons of cocaine in one of
the biggest maritime cocaine busts anywhere on record, officials said Monday.
National police working with agents from the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Agency seized the boat on Sunday near the island of Coiba, said a
police official who asked his name not be used because he was not
authorized to speak on the record.
Police arrested 12 men on the boat, including Mexicans and
Panamanians, and another two suspects in Panama City in connection
with the drugs, the official said.
The boat, which was sailing under a Panamanian flag, was being
transported to Panama City on Monday, he said.
Drug cartels often smuggle Colombian cocaine along Panama's Pacific
coast en route to the United States.
In 2004, the U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Navy seized 28 tons of cocaine
from two fishing boats off the coast of the Galapagos Islands in what
U.S. State Department officials then called their largest seizures
ever during a one-week stretch.
In 2005, police in southwest Colombia seized 15 tons of cocaine from
a jungle stronghold, in what national authorities called the largest
haul ever on their soil.
Ecuadorean authorities said Monday they had fished 200 kilograms (440
pounds) from the Pacific after the crew of a boat carrying the cargo
set the vessel ablaze after being intercepted by the U.S. Coast Guard.
Milton Lalama, director general of Ecuador's Merchant Marines, said
crew members burned the boat "to make the evidence disappear" after
it was intercepted last month. It was unclear how much cocaine was on
the boat before it was burned.
The boat's crew of six Colombians and eight Ecuadoreans were
transferred Monday to the Ecuadorean port city of Guayaquil, where
the Colombians are in U.S. custody, Ecuador's counter-drug prosecutor
said in Guayaquil.
BUSTS ON RECORD
PANAMA CITY, Panama -- Panamanian police seized a boat off the
nation's Pacific coast carrying 19.4 metric tons of cocaine in one of
the biggest maritime cocaine busts anywhere on record, officials said Monday.
National police working with agents from the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Agency seized the boat on Sunday near the island of Coiba, said a
police official who asked his name not be used because he was not
authorized to speak on the record.
Police arrested 12 men on the boat, including Mexicans and
Panamanians, and another two suspects in Panama City in connection
with the drugs, the official said.
The boat, which was sailing under a Panamanian flag, was being
transported to Panama City on Monday, he said.
Drug cartels often smuggle Colombian cocaine along Panama's Pacific
coast en route to the United States.
In 2004, the U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Navy seized 28 tons of cocaine
from two fishing boats off the coast of the Galapagos Islands in what
U.S. State Department officials then called their largest seizures
ever during a one-week stretch.
In 2005, police in southwest Colombia seized 15 tons of cocaine from
a jungle stronghold, in what national authorities called the largest
haul ever on their soil.
Ecuadorean authorities said Monday they had fished 200 kilograms (440
pounds) from the Pacific after the crew of a boat carrying the cargo
set the vessel ablaze after being intercepted by the U.S. Coast Guard.
Milton Lalama, director general of Ecuador's Merchant Marines, said
crew members burned the boat "to make the evidence disappear" after
it was intercepted last month. It was unclear how much cocaine was on
the boat before it was burned.
The boat's crew of six Colombians and eight Ecuadoreans were
transferred Monday to the Ecuadorean port city of Guayaquil, where
the Colombians are in U.S. custody, Ecuador's counter-drug prosecutor
said in Guayaquil.
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