China seizes record 1.3 tons of cocaine

This photo taken on April 24, 2018 shows a policeman standing guard next to bags of cocaine seized in Guangzhou in China’s southern Guangdong province. / AFP /

BEIJING, China (AFP) — Chinese police have seized 1.3 tons of cocaine from South America in the country’s biggest ever haul of the drug, authorities said.

Police in the southern city of Shenzhen have detained 10 suspects, mostly from Hong Kong, following an investigation that began in July 2017, the Guangdong province public security department said.

The statement, released Tuesday, called it the “biggest amount of cocaine seized in the country.”

The official Xinhua news agency said the massive haul had a street value of one billion yuan ($160 million).

The drug came from an unidentified South American country and was shipped to the Guangdong port of Shanwei.

The police statement, released Tuesday, did not say whether the drug was destined for the Chinese market or another country, but cocaine use is low in China compared to other drugs.

A 2017 government report found that China had 2.5 million drug users, with 60 percent consuming synthetic drugs, 38 percent using opiates and 1.4 percent using cocaine and marijuana.

Cocaine originates in the Andes but China is believed to be one of the main manufacturers of synthetic drugs — including opioids such as fentanyl — which have been blamed for public health crises in the US, Canada, and Australia among other countries.

The Shenzhen investigation began in July 2017 after police received a tip related to drug trafficking, the Guangdong public security statement said.

A month later, a task force learned that gangs were about to conduct a “large-scale” drug delivery. Five suspects, including three from Hong Kong, were detained and 40 kilograms of cocaine were seized.

In February, the investigation led to the arrest of three more suspects and the seizure of another 1,291 kilograms of cocaine.

The two suspected ringleaders were captured in an unidentified foreign country in March and returned to China.

© Agence France-Presse

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