Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Police make largest-ever heroin bust of 1.27 tons

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TURKISH police units made their largest-ever heroin bust of 1.271 tons, Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu said yesterday. This massive amount of the deadly drug was found hidden among animal fat inside the trailer of a truck at a checkpoint erected on the Erzurum-Erzincan highway in the Akyazı district in eastern Turkey on Wednesday.

Bülent Şensoy, the police chief of Erzincan province, told Anadolu Agency (AA) that the truck was traveling from the eastern province of Van to Istanbul.

The heroin, hidden inside 1,395 packages, was found thanks to the attention of police officers and their narcotics dog Odin, a Belgian Malinois Shepherd.

Şensoy said that three people in the truck and two others in Van were detained in connection to the incident.

Speaking at the Internatio­nal Narcotics Conference held by the Police Academy Crime Studies and Criminolog­y Research Center (SAMER) in Antalya province, Soylu said that Turkey continues to display a serious and determined fight against drugs on the global scale. “In 2018 only, we carried out 134,088 operations. We captured nearly 80 tons of cannabis, 19.6 million Captagon pills and 7.8 million Ecstasy pills,” Soylu said, adding that the amount of heroin captured in 2018 was 15.9 tons, excluding yesterday’s bust.

In his speech, Soylu also criticized Western powers for failing to understand the links between the PKK terrorist organizati­on and its role in the drug trade.

“As the organic link between the PKK and drugs is this clear and mentioned in the decisions and reports of European and U.S. official institutio­ns, we cannot make sense of not seeing a serious stance against [the PKK] and instead seeing steps in favor of increasing the production and distributi­on of drugs, while providing arms, logistical support and legal protection to the PKK; we cannot explain this in line with the norms of civilizati­on in the 21st century,” Soylu said.

“Our extraditio­n requests for PKK members sought through red notices are not met, especially when we move towards inner Europe.” Soylu underlined that the People’s Protection Forces (YPG), the Syrian offshoot of the PKK receiving arms, money and training from Western powers, is cooperatin­g with Daesh terrorists on the organized crime scene despite fighting each other.

 ??  ?? Narcotics dog Odin poses with seized drugs.
Narcotics dog Odin poses with seized drugs.

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