Malta Independent

Customs releases final drug bust figures: 10.7 tonnes of cannabis worth €28.5 million

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The operation to quantify and value the massive cache of drugs discovered hidden inside four shipping containers ended on yesterday morning, with the Customs Department revealing that the final amount of cannabis resin found totalled 10,729.40 kilos.

The market price is in the region of €28.5 million.

The rigorous process was conducted by the police Anti-Drug Squad and the Forensic Unit, in conjunctio­n with the Malta Customs officials.

During the operation on Monday, Malta Customs opened four containers which were under suspicion, following clear positive indication­s by the scanning equipment on two of the containers of inconsiste­ncy in the makeup within the containers.

The first container, which was declared as containing buckets full of detergent liquid, contained 28,436 packets of cannabis resin, weighing a total 5,687.20 kilogramme­s.

In the second searched container, which was likewise declared as containing pales of detergent liquid, 25,211 pales full of detergent liquid were found, weighing a total of 5,042.20 kilogramme­s.

These two containers, in fact, provided clear images in the scanner that the material contained within most probably consisted in drug content, leading to a physical examinatio­n that actually confirmed the suspicion indicated by the scanner.

The third and fourth containers that were searched did not yield any drugs.

The Department of Customs thanked the police, the Security Department of Malta Freeport, who facilitate­d the smooth operation process that needed to be conducted under strict security, and all of its officials who were involved in the sensitive operation that led to the biggest drug find ever recorded in Malta’ history.

The department also thanked the European Commission, including OLAF, for co-financing, through various programmes, the purchase of the ZBV Backscatte­r scanner, the Nuctech scanner and the sophistica­ted analytical electronic equipment, operated by the Customs Intelligen­ce Service, and the setting up of the new Canine Unit, within the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e.

“These tools are indeed serving their purpose toward the attainment of the new targets which the Department of Customs in Malta is adamant to reach,” the department said.

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