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Wednesday, April 24, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Shipwrecked Colombians Saved by Cocaine Bales

Three suspected drug smugglers survived in shark-infested Pacific waters by clinging for hours to floating bales of cocaine, Colombia's navy said Tuesday.

BOGOTA, Colombia (AFP) — Three suspected drug smugglers survived in shark-infested Pacific waters by clinging for hours to floating bales of cocaine, Colombia's navy said Tuesday.

The Colombians are suspected of smuggling 1.2 tons of cocaine from Tumaco in Colombia when their boat was hit by a wave Saturday and capsized, Captain Jorge Maldonado of Colombia's Task Force Against Drug Trafficking told Agence France-Presse.

By the time the men were picked up around 30 nautical miles from Tumaco by a Colombian coastguard vessel, they had been in the water for about seven hours, Maldonado said.

"The coast guard arrived and these three people were floating on a material that by its characteristics resembled drugs," Maldonado said.

The men were taken ashore along with the floating bales, which tested positive for cocaine hydrochloride.

The men were in good health and will face charges of drugs trafficking.

The search is continuing for a fourth man whom the men said was with them.

"Very possibly they were on their way to Central America," Maldonado said.

The port of Tumaco is one of the main conduits for drugs leaving Colombia for Central America and the United States.

Colombia is the world's largest producer of cocaine, and the United States its biggest consumer.

© Agence France-Presse

Categories / Criminal, International

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