The Borneo Post

How drug trafficker­s made Galápagos Islands their gas station

- Samantha Schmidt & Arturo Torres

ISABELA, Ecuador: Charles Darwin described it as the most desolate of the Galápagos Islands, an almost extraterre­strial outpost crawling with giant tortoises and marine iguanas found nowhere else in the world, where smoke curled out of volcanic craters and lava flowed black.

Today, more than 100,000 tourists visit the white sand beaches of Isabela. Those who come by air land at the José de Villamil airport, a lone airstrip surrounded by brush. By day, the modest facility is manned by a single employee.

At night, it goes dark. There are no security cameras, no lights, no one keeping watch at the entrance to one of the most carefully protected reserves on earth.

It was here, just a er dusk one evening in early 2021, that the 53year-old airport employee was surprised by a noise: the whir of a small airplane touching down unannounce­d on the runway.

Panicked, he jumped on his motorbike and rushed to the police station. But by the time the authoritie­s reached the scene, the Cessna Conquest II had been abandoned. Whoever had flown it had fled, leaving behind eight fuel containers, five of them full.

From the outset, authoritie­s suspected drug trafficker­s.

The mystery offers a glimpse into the growing criminal threat to the Galápagos Islands, the beloved Unesco World Heritage site that’s being pulled into the booming drug trade consuming much of Latin America.

In mainland Ecuador, 600 miles away, Mexican and Albanian drug trafficker­s have fueled a surge in gang violence unlike any in the country’s history.

On Tuesday, armed men terrorized the country in a series of apparently coordinate­d a acks: car bombings, prison riots, police kidnapping­s.

One group took over a television station during a live broadcast and held the staff at gunpoint. President Daniel Noboa took the extraordin­ary step of declaring an armed internal conflict in the country: “We are in a state of war.”

Fueling this deluge of violence is the rising global demand for cocaine.

Internatio­nal criminal organizati­ons are working with local gangs to move the drug from South America to the United States and Europe.

To make the journey, smugglers need gasoline. So they’ve made the Galápagos their covert refueling point. A secret gas station of the Pacific.

On Isabela, the lone airport employee feared the cartels had arrived. The Cessna was towed to the side of the runway and le there.

One morning two months later, the employee pulled up to the airport to begin work - and was treated to another surprise.

“I went to wash my face to see if it was true, what I saw,” he would tell authoritie­s.

The ghost plane was gone.

The lucrative business of gas smuggling

Ecuador’s location - the country lies wedged between Colombia and Peru, the world’s two largest cocaine producers has long made it a transit point for trafficker­s moving drugs north toward Central America.

But authoritie­s began to step up military patrols. They seized a record 176 tons of cocaine in 2021, up from 92 a year earlier.

Now, to avoid authoritie­s, many trafficker­s are blazing a more circuitous trail - one that loops just south and west of the Galápagos. They call this path through empty, open ocean the ‘desert route’.

With go-fast boats or submersibl­es, trafficker­s can travel up to 14 days without docking, Ecuadorian Navy officials say, scratching their skin as needed to stay awake.

In 2023, the navy seized nearly 25 tons of cocaine around the Galápagos - nine tons in November alone - a 150 per cent surge from 2022. In 2019, the navy captured only 1 ton.

For years, artisanal fishermen here have received government fuel subsidies to safeguard their precarious livelihood­s.

Many are now taking advantage of government­subsidized fuel to engage in the lucrative business of gas smuggling.

Instead of using their discounted, legally purchased gas to fish their daily catch, navy officials say, scores are saving their supply for trafficker­s.

“I’ve been offered US$6,000 to US$7,000 for a trip,” one fisherman said.

The man, in his early 40s, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss what he says was his experience gas smuggling years ago.

Using a satellite phone and following GPS coordinate­s, he said, he met four masked men on a go-fast boat. Two were driving, he said; two were keeping armed watch over the cocaine.

“Lots of people have become millionair­es off of this,” the man said.

Navy officials say gas smugglers can earn up to US$30,000 per job.

Cocaine seizures around the Galápagos have picked up in recent months. But it’s no longer only gasoline and drugs being smuggled through the islands: In late November, the navy found 112 rifles and 48 pistols on a go-fast boat about 150 miles south of San Cristóbal island. Investigat­ors suspect the weapons were on their way to arm Ecuadorian gangs fighting for control of drug routes.

Pablo Ramírez, who until November led the national police force’s anti-narcotics efforts, said the Pacific smuggling route is the most challengin­g for authoritie­s to control - and the waters around the Galápagos Islands are particular­ly vulnerable.

Ramírez, who previously led the country’s prison system, was one of about two dozen top security officials and judges arrested in December for alleged criminal activity to benefit an imprisoned drug trafficker. He denies the allegation­s; he has not yet been formally charged.

Ecuador is responsibl­e for monitoring more than 490,000 square miles of ocean - five times the country’s land area.

The more than 24,000 boats registered for artisanal fishing embark from more than 120 ports and many more beaches that are mostly unwatched by authoritie­s.

The US presence on this coastline is minimal; in 2009, le ist then-president Rafael Correa ousted US forces from a military base in the port city of Manta.

Captain Patricio Rivas, the commander of the navy in the Galápagos, said the islands have become an important source of gasoline for smugglers.

He said authoritie­s are working to track and restrict the use of fuel by artisanal fisherman.

Interviews with dozens of local leaders, intelligen­ce officials, residents, activists and fishermen reveal an archipelag­o increasing­ly captured by drug traffickin­g.

They describe a place where everyone knows everyone, where fishermen get rich seemingly overnight, and where a dollarised and cash-based local economy creates ideal conditions for money laundering.

Airports and docks, particular­ly on Isabela, have li le to no security. There are no security cameras, no navy officials monitoring who is leaving or arriving at night.

Port employees on mainland Ecuador say containers that are headed for the islands are rarely checked for contraband.

One of the few shipping lines that carried food and supplies to the Galápagos asked authoritie­s in March 2022 to provide a permanent police presence in the freight reception yard. The government did not fulfill the request. The business ceased operations in December.

A team of intelligen­ce officials that traveled to the Galápagos in October 2022 to investigat­e allegation­s of corruption in the navy reported evidence that sailors were accepting bribes to allow unauthoris­ed boats to come and go from the ports.

Islanders have for years found packages of cocaine that washed onto the beaches. But on Isabela, an island of around 3,000 inhabitant­s, many are afraid to report their discoverie­s.

Some say they’ve heard unauthoriz­ed planes flying overhead. The navy intelligen­ce service is investigat­ing rumors of clandestin­e runways hidden in uninhabite­d corners of the island.

“Here on the islands, everyone is family,” Rivas said.

“There are lots of things people keep covered up. They might know who is involved, but they won’t say anything.”

Hilda Moscoso Espinoza was born and raised on Isabela. During the 1940s and ’50s, the island was home to a penal colony. Her father was one of the last wardens.

She remembers the time before tourists, when only about 100 people lived in the town. They ate meals communally.

Now, the 58-year-old says, she sees how the flow of drugs has affected the community. A family member has struggled for years with addiction to cocaine and other drugs.

Moscoso has pleaded with local officials to establish a rehabilita­tion or psychiatri­c center to address rising drug use on the island.

“Li le by li le, the drugs are taking over the island,” she said. “And there is no help.”

‘Here, it’s an open secret’

The airport administra­tor was terrified to go back to work.

He had asked police to watch the plane overnight, he said, or to at least install a security camera and point it at the runway. But Isabela’s 20-member police department told him they didn’t have the capacity, he said, and the case was now in the hands of prosecutor­s based on a different island.

The administra­tor, now 56, feared for his safety. He spoke to The Washington Post on the condition of anonymity.

His fears were warranted. Military intelligen­ce officials would conclude the plane had come from Mexico. A year earlier, they said, it had traveled from Ecuador to Mexico with a different registrati­on number, a flight now under investigat­ion for alleged drug traffickin­g.

The administra­tor wasn’t the only person to sound the alarm.

Shortly a er the plane arrived in January 2021, the head of Isabela’s police force told prosecutor­s he had reason to believe people on the island wanted to steal the plane, according to a memo cited in court filings.

Major William Albán Durán requested more officers to monitor it. He also asked them to move the gas cans that had been le next to the airplane, because they made it too easy to take it.

But authoritie­s never moved the cans, and police rarely checked on the plane, the airport administra­tor said.

Then, in March 2021, two months a er the Cessna arrived, the police force gathered at a waterside restaurant in Puerto Villamil to celebrate Albán’s birthday.

Photos in court documents show around 15 men at the Cuna del Sol raising glasses of wine. A resident nearby told The Post of seeing the officers drinking into the night.

At some point that day, authoritie­s believe, the plane disappeare­d. Months later, prosecutor­s charged Albán and five other police officers with ‘illicit associatio­n’ for their alleged connection to the disappeara­nce of the plane and an alleged a empt to cover it up.

Judge Ramón Abad Gallardo accused them of removing evidence and reports on the case and of failing to remove the gas tanks from the airport.

“If the fuel had not been in the plane or nearby, they would not have taken the plane out,” Gallardo said.

The officers are awaiting trial. Albán did not respond to a request for comment by The Post.

The investigat­ion into the plane’s mysterious arrival and equally perplexing departure remains open.

Intelligen­ce investigat­ors reported in October 2022 that the lack of security at Isabela airport made it an ideal hub for ‘narcoplane­s’.

In an intelligen­ce report obtained by The Washington Post, investigat­ors said they suspect a local airline company and a powerful businessma­n in the Galápagos have links to drug and wildlife traffickin­g.

Months a er the plane’s disappeara­nce, the airport administra­tor said, a man stopped by with an offer.

The man, whom the administra­tor recognized as an island resident, offered US$100,000 in exchange for access to the runway.

He didn’t say how it would be used, the administra­tor said, but he implied he had cut other such deals.

The administra­tor had suspicions about a former colleague at the airport.

When the administra­tor refused the man’s offer, he said, the man replied: Your colleague, he was willing to take these kinds of risks.

Rivas confirmed that a former aviation authority employee was under investigat­ion on suspicion of involvemen­t in a ‘drug traffickin­g network’.

The former employee did not respond to texts or calls for comment.

The next day, the administra­tor said, another man came by the airport.

This time, he said, it was a stranger, a man who had what sounded to him to be a Colombian accent. The man stepped up the offer: US$250,000. More than he could earn in 10 years working at the airport.

I don’t want it, I don’t want it, the administra­tor said he responded.

So how much do you want? the man asked.

My life doesn’t have a price, the administra­tor responded.

He reported the offers to an intelligen­ce officer, he said.

The administra­tor had seen neighbors suddenly find the money to open a new hotel, buy a new boat, build a new house. The men and their offers confirmed for him what he had long suspected: Isabela was awash in drug money, he said, and the authoritie­s weren’t doing anything about it.

“Everyone already knows,” he said. “Here, it’s an open secret.”

 ?? — The Washington Post photos ?? Artisanal fishing boats float in Puerto Ayora, a popular tourist destinatio­n on Santa Cruz Island.
— The Washington Post photos Artisanal fishing boats float in Puerto Ayora, a popular tourist destinatio­n on Santa Cruz Island.
 ?? ?? Tourists take photos on Bartolomé Island.
Tourists take photos on Bartolomé Island.
 ?? ?? A beach in Puerto Villamil.
A beach in Puerto Villamil.
 ?? ?? The crew of the Darwin Island.
The crew of the Darwin Island.
 ?? ?? Victor John Coronado and two Coast Guard comrades board and inspect a boat they suspect of smuggling gas off San Cristóbal.
Victor John Coronado and two Coast Guard comrades board and inspect a boat they suspect of smuggling gas off San Cristóbal.
 ?? ?? The José de Villamil airport on Isabela Island, where a still-unexplaine­d ghost plane landed and subsequent­ly disappeare­d.
The José de Villamil airport on Isabela Island, where a still-unexplaine­d ghost plane landed and subsequent­ly disappeare­d.
 ?? ?? Hilda Moscoso Espinoza, whose son has struggled for years with cocaine addiction, sits on her bed at her farm on Isabela.
Hilda Moscoso Espinoza, whose son has struggled for years with cocaine addiction, sits on her bed at her farm on Isabela.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia