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http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0623/p06s15-woam.html
TUMACO, Colombia - Lt. Oscar Calderón had been at sea with his men for four days, waiting. They watched the waves as they patrolled Colombia's Pacific coastline. On the fourth night, a US surveillance plane picked up a signal. The cocaine submarine it had detected was on the move.
Lieutenant Calderón peered into the moonless night to try to pinpoint the vessel, which rides just below the sea's surface.
Every so often the surveillance team would radio in the latest position of the sub, but the men at sea saw nothing.
Colombian drug traffickers' latest transport vehicle of choice, known as narcosubs or semisubmersibles, are made to avoid detection. Once loaded with anywhere from four to 10 tons of cocaine, only about one foot of the homemade vessels rises above water as they make the 15-day, 1,500-mile journey from Colombia's southern Pacific coast to the shores of Mexico.
"It could have been 50 meters in front of me, and even with night-vision goggles and everything, I saw nothing," Calderón remembers. But the surveillance team led Calderón and his men into a small jungle-covered estuary south of this coastal Pacific city, and what they found there made the night-long hunt worth the wait.
Deep within the maze of waterways, Calderón and his men found the semisub they had been chasing. Beside it lay 1.6 tons of cocaine in perfectly packed water-tight bricks, ready to make the trip north. Several days later, they found a clandestine shipyard where two other subs were under construction.
The find last fall should have been among the high points of Calderón's career in Colombia's Coast Guard. But Calderón sighs. "We make this huge effort to seize four, but with one that gets through, the drug traffickers make up their losses," he says. "That's what makes our job so frustrating."
Forty-two semisubs have been seized since 1993 – with three nabbed in the first week of June alone. But laws have not yet caught up with the drug traffickers.
IT IS STILL LEGAL in Colombia to build, transport, or possess unregistered semisubmersible vessels. So, if no drugs are found in a seizure on land or at sea, there is no crime. But a bill that gives authorities the tools to prosecute anyone linked to the subs is soon to become law. Prison sentences for those convicted range from six to 14 years.
The bill follows a new law passed last fall in the United States that outlaws unregistered subs in international waters, regardless of whether they can be shown to have been carrying drugs. Typically, crews that are detected by naval authorities open an emergency valve built into the subs to scuttle the vessels and their cargo. With the evidence of cocaine at the bottom of the sea, officials had been obliged by international law to treat the crew as castaways
By mariacvetanoski on Jun 24, 2009, 04:17 in Politics & the war.
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mariacvetanoski says on Jun 24, 2009, 04:17: The crew of one sub interdicted in May by the US Coast Guard will be the second to be tried under the new law, according to US Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Brian Robinson. Save the street children of Colombia Now!! 0 funny, 0 helpful. |
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mariacvetanoski says on Jun 24, 2009, 04:17: One recent morning, a Coast Guard team accompanied by marines set out from Tumaco, up the Pacific coast with an informant who had told them about a clandestine shipyard hidden deep in the mangrove-covered waterways. Save the street children of Colombia Now!! 0 funny, 0 helpful. |
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gimmedub says on Jun 24, 2009, 07:45: what else do you expect? 20k US is a goldmine to someone who doesn't have any education, has been moved off his land by paras or farc, has no access to healthcare and has been forgotten by their government and the world... trying and imprisoning the sailors in a US prison isn't going to make that much a difference - they at least get three meals a day, doctor, and a bed/shower.
0 funny, 0 helpful. |
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lampltr says on Jun 24, 2009, 18:28: Great article....we were making headway in the mid 90's out of Panama until these came around....
0 funny, 0 helpful. |
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Monpirri says on Jun 24, 2009, 18:53: Mariacvetanoski you spend too much time posting the type of news that I have been broadcasted in the past 20 years. "Anyone who still thinks that Colombia is not a gastronomical paradise needs to have their head examined." Darloup 0 funny, 0 helpful. |
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mariacvetanoski says on Jun 25, 2009, 04:24: no for an orphanage in bogota , that helps street children in COLOMBIA NOT wind up like in this story... Save the street children of Colombia Now!! 0 funny, 0 helpful. |
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Monpirri says on Jun 25, 2009, 17:08: mariacvetanoski says on Jun 25, 2009, 04:24 (today): flag "Anyone who still thinks that Colombia is not a gastronomical paradise needs to have their head examined." Darloup 0 funny, 0 helpful. |
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