Colombian navy confiscates more than one ton of cocaine

Colombian navy seizes more than one ton of cocaine and semi-submersible ‘narco sub' in operations on country's Pacific coastline

A counter narcotics police officer loads bags containing cocaine seized in Chinacota, near Colombia's northeastern border with Venezuela. Colombia is the worlds largest producer of coca and cocaine exporter.
Reuters (Archive)

A counter narcotics police officer loads bags containing cocaine seized in Chinacota, near Colombia's northeastern border with Venezuela. Colombia is the worlds largest producer of coca and cocaine exporter.

The Colombian navy on Sunday said it had seized more than 1 ton of cocaine and a semi-submersible "narco sub" in operations on the country's Pacific coastline.

At the Natural Sanquianga Park, a reserve in southwestern Colombia, navy personnel discovered and destroyed "a semi-submersible designed like a torpedo" able to carry two tonnes of cocaine, the navy said in a statement.

The navy said that it has destroyed or seized 91 illegal semi-submersible "narco subs" since 1993. This is the first one destroyed in 2016.

Near the craft troops found an underground storage site hidden among the bushes with packs of cocaine stuffed in large plastic bags weighing 652 kilos (1,437 pounds), the statement read.

Investigators said that a drug trafficking network was stockpiling the cocaine to eventually ship it aboard the torpedo craft to Central America.

In a separate operation in the Bocagrande region of Narino, troops found packs of cocaine weighing a total of 402 kilos inside two boats.

The navy said that the seizures prevented the drug traffickers from earning some 32 million dollars in sales if the cocaine had reached international markets.

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