Belfast Telegraph

Six held after £60m of cocaine seized on yacht off Welsh coast

- BY ADAM HALE

SIX people have been arrested after a yacht believed to be carrying cocaine with an estimated street value of £60m was seized off the Welsh coast.

Investigat­ors from the National Crime Agency are searching the vessel at Fishguard port in Pembrokesh­ire after what is believed to be one of the biggest drugs busts carried out by them in recent years.

The operation is the result of a “long-term” investigat­ion by the NCA into an organised crime ring importing class A drugs into the UK from South America.

Officers from Border Force cutter HMC Protector boarded the sailing yacht Atrevido about half a mile (0.8km) off the coast on Tuesday morning.

Packages of cocaine weighing more than 550lb (250kg) had been recovered by midday yesterday, but investigat­ors believe there is an additional 1,102lb (500kg) still stashed on board.

Two men, aged 41 and 53, both British nationals, were arrested on the yacht.

Four other people — three men, aged 23, 31 and 47, and a 30-year-old woman, were arrested in Liverpool and Loughborou­gh, and have been released on bail until late next month.

Craig Naylor, deputy director of investigat­ions for the NCA, said he believed the drugs bust was their second biggest in recent history.

He said: “We believe what we’ve taken off the boat has a wholesale value of £8 million, and the street value of that will be in excess of £20 million.

“That’s likely to rise as we take more product off the boat, so as an estimate the wholesale value would be £20 million in total, and a street value of £60 million.

“This is a very high end job — 750kg (1,654lb) of cocaine. You don’t come across that every day.

“The NCA, working with Border Force, working with other partners, are regularly seizing, arresting and convicting people for these sort of offences, but usually for 10kg-20kg (22lb-44lb) amounts. Certainly in my recollecti­on this is the second biggest seizure that the NCA has had in recent years.”

Mr Naylor said the UK had seen a rise in violence and drug-related crimes including county lines traffickin­g in the last “three to four years” and Tuesday’s seizure was part of a “front line defence” by the NCA to tackle the supply of drugs into the country which fuels the criminalit­y.

Steve Whitton, deputy director of the Border Force’s Maritime Command, said: “Our collaborat­ion with the NCA ensured that the Atrevido’s cargo did not reach its intended destinatio­n.”

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