Cyprus Today

‘Operation Swamp’ nets dozens of suspects Network smashed in largest-ever drugs op

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THE largest anti-drugs operation in the history of Turkey has taken place in cooperatio­n with nine countries, Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu said Tuesday.

Some 67 out of 94 suspects were detained in “Operation Swamp,” according to the minister.

A drug lord convicted and jailed in the 1990s was among those captured, while the investigat­ion also disclosed the network’s links to the Gülenist Terror Group (Fetö).

Soylu noted that the operation has been planned for around a year to target narcotics-related funds.

Nine countries, including the Netherland­s, Belgium, Spain, Italy, Chile, Ecuador and Brazil, cooperated in the operation.

“The organisati­on has two top bosses, one of whom is in Brazil and the other is in the Netherland­s and is sought with a 26-year-old Interpol Red Notice,” Soylu said, adding that he personally came to the Anti-Narcotics Crimes Department to follow the developmen­ts in the morning.

Authoritie­s seized 70 million TL in cash, and Minister Soylu said the gang controlled a fortune of more than 500 million TL in revenues. Media outlets named two leaders of the gang as Nejat Daş and Çetin Gören. Gören is reportedly the suspect sought by Interpol Red Notice. Daş was arrested in May near İstanbul by police tracking down a truck smuggling cash into Turkey from Germany. Once named Turkish Escobar, Daş was the prime suspect in another major counternar­cotics operation in 1992. A vessel reportedly carrying more than three tons of morphine was deliberate­ly sunk by its crew off the coast of Cyprus that year and his name was identified in that incident, though it took another year for him to be captured and jailed for his link to another ship intercepte­d while carrying a large haul of drugs.

Soylu said the Chief Prosecutor’s Office in the capital Ankara was coordinati­ng the operation, which was also carried out in 11 cities in Turkey.

Officials provided photos and videos of the operation to the media. A video shows the lavishly decorated office of one suspect — Çetin Gören, according to media sources — and stacks of cash found in the office, along with a large cache of weapons and $1 bills with serial numbers starting with F. Although authoritie­s did not make a statement on the bills, they are associated with Fetö, which was behind the July 15, 2016 coup attempt in Turkey. Investigat­ions after the coup attempt discovered many of the putschists carried the bills, and they served as an item for secret members of the group to recognise each other, through the letter F in the serial number, referring to the group’s leader Fetullah Gülen. Authoritie­s say that the network of suspects was behind the shipments of drugs seized by authoritie­s on various dates, from tons of heroin captured in 1993 to more than 18 tons of cocaine seized in 2012, as well as 20 tons of heroin and ecstasy pills captured aboard a vessel in 2016.

The report says the network also financed Fetö. The same report says suspects had connection­s to 16 companies and used couriers to smuggle cash they earned from drug trade into Turkey. More than £953,000 and 311,500 Danish krone (£37,907) were seized during the operation from couriers trying to smuggle them into Turkey. Authoritie­s also seized more than 52 million TL and more than $1.3 million during the operations, according to the report.

Turkey reported progress in drug seizures in recent years and stepped up cooperatio­n with other countries against smuggling. The World Drug Report 2020 released by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) last week highlights Turkey’s success in drug seizures but warns that the country remains a popular route for drug smuggling to Europe.

The report, based on 2018 data, says the largest total quantity of heroin seized by a country that year was in Iran, followed by Turkey, the US, China, Pakistan, Afghanista­n and Belgium. Turkey seized 0.7 tons of opium, 0.4 tons of morphine and 19 tons of heroin in 2018. According to the report, Turkey seized 62 per cent of heroin and morphine in the region outside Asia. Turkey continued to account for the bulk of heroin and morphine seized in eastern and southeaste­rn Europe — with 95 per cent.

An increasing crackdown on drugs helped Turkey deal with “narcoterro­rism,” or profits for terrorist groups from the drug trade, Turkish officials say. Narcoterro­rism profits the PKK, an internatio­nally recognised terrorist group that has pursued a campaign of violence against Turkey since the 1980s. The PKK terrorist group earns $1.5 billion from drug traffickin­g annually, according to the Turkish National Drug Report for 2018. The PKK controls about 80 per cent of the drug trade in Europe, according to Soylu.

 ??  ?? Police officers escort Nejat Daş, one of the suspects, to the police headquarte­rs, in Ankara, Turkey on Tuesday. Right, a portrait of one of the suspects – Çetin Gören, according to the media — found in his office. The caption reads sultan in Turkish.
Police officers escort Nejat Daş, one of the suspects, to the police headquarte­rs, in Ankara, Turkey on Tuesday. Right, a portrait of one of the suspects – Çetin Gören, according to the media — found in his office. The caption reads sultan in Turkish.

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