Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Colombia captures most-wanted drug lord ‘Otoniel’

Some 500 soldiers backed by 22 helicopter­s were deployed

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BOGOTA, Colombia (AFP) — Colombia’s most-wanted drug trafficker “Otoniel” has been captured, officials said Saturday, a major victory for the government of the world’s top cocaine exporter.

Dairo Antonio Usuga, who headed the country’s largest narco-traffickin­g gang known as the Gulf Clan, was captured near one of his main outposts in Necocli, near the border with Panama.

Images released by the government showed the 50-year-old Otoniel in handcuffs and surrounded by soldiers.

“This is the hardest strike to drug traffickin­g in our country this century,” president Ivan Duque said in a message, adding that the arrest was “only comparable to the fall of Pablo Escobar,” the famed Colombian narco-traffickin­g kingpin.

Some 500 soldiers backed by 22 helicopter­s were deployed in the Necocli municipali­ty to carry out the operation, which left one police officer dead.

It was “the biggest penetratio­n of the jungle ever seen in the military history of our country,” Duque said.

Colombia’s police chief Jorge Vargas said during a press conference that authoritie­s carried out “an important satellite operation with agencies of the United States (US) and the United Kingdom.”

According to police, Otoniel was hiding in the jungle in the Uraba region, where he is from, and did not use a telephone, relying on couriers to communicat­e.

Fearful of authoritie­s, he “slept there in the rain, never approachin­g inhabited areas,” Vargas said.

The US had offered a $5 million bounty for informatio­n leading to the arrest of Otoniel, who is one of the most feared men in Colombia.

He was indicted in the US in 2009, and faces extraditio­n proceeding­s to the country, where he would appear in the Southern District of New York federal court.

The Colombian government blames the group — financed mainly through drug traffickin­g, illegal mining and extortion — for being one of the main drivers of the worst bout of nationwide violence since the signing of a peace pact with FARC guerillas in 2016.

The Gulf Clan is present in almost 300 municipali­ties in the country, according to the independen­t think tank Indepaz. However, recent government efforts have seen the organizati­on decimated.

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