The Daily Telegraph

Thirty years’ supply of cocaine found floating off New Zealand

- By Our Foreign Staff

ENOUGH cocaine to supply New Zealand for 30 years has been found by police floating in the Pacific Ocean.

Andrew Coster, New Zealand’s police commission­er, told reporters the record haul of 81 bales of cocaine weighed 3.2 tonnes and had a street value of around Nz$316million (£166million).

“This is the largest find of illicit drugs by New Zealand’s agencies by some margin,” he said.

Officials believe the drugs were dropped at a “floating transit point” in the Pacific, where they would have been picked up and taken to Australia.

A police photo showed the massive haul was bound by netting and covered in yellow floats. Some of the bales had a Batman symbol on them, and the packs of cocaine inside are labelled with what appeared to be a four-leaf clover print.

“We believe it was destined for Australia, where it would have been enough to service the market for one year,” Coster said. “It is more than New Zealand would use in 30 years.”

A naval boat intercepte­d the bundle, which was drifting hundreds of kilometres northwest of New Zealand, thanks in part to intelligen­ce from the “Five Eyes” security alliance. The decadesold intelligen­ce-sharing network comprises the US, Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

Mr Coster described the cocaine find as a “huge result” for police in both New Zealand and Australia.

“There is no doubt this discovery lands a major financial blow right from the South American producers through to the distributo­rs of this product,” he added.

Officials said it was too early to say where the drugs had come from.

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