Colombia’s most wanted drug lord is captured
BOGOTA, Colombia – Colombian security forces have captured the country’s most wanted drug trafficker, a rural warlord who evaded a decadelong manhunt by corrupting state officials and aligning himself with combatants on the left and right.
President Iván Duque likened the arrest Saturday of Dairo Antonio Úsuga to the capture three decades ago of Pablo Escobar.
Images circulating on social media showed Úsuga handcuffed with his face planted to the ground.
Úsuga, better known by his alias Otoniel, is the alleged head of the much-feared Gulf Clan, whose army of assassins has terrorized much of northern Colombia to gain control of major cocaine smuggling routes through thick jungles north to Central America and onto the U.S.
He has long been a fixture on the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s most wanted fugitives list, for whose capture it had been offering a $5 million reward.
He was first indicted in 2009, in Manhattan federal court, on narcotics charges and for allegedly providing assistance to a paramilitary group designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. government.
But like many of his gunmen, he also has cycled through the ranks of several guerrilla groups, most recently claiming to lead the Gaitanist Self Defense Forces of Colombia, after a mid-20th century Colombian leftist firebrand.
He also faces criminal charges in Miami, Tampa, Florida, and Brooklyn federal courts.
Authorities said intelligence provided by the U.S. and U.K. led more than 500 soldiers and members of Colombia’s special forces to Úsuga’s jungle hideout, which was protected by eight rings of security.
Úsuga for years flew under the radar of authorities by eschewing the high profile of Colombia’s better-known narcos.
He and his brother, who was killed in a raid in 2012, got their start as gunmen for the now-defunct leftist guerrilla group known as the Popular Liberation Army and then switched sides and joined the rebels’ battlefield enemies, a right-wing paramilitary group.
He refused to disarm when that militia signed a peace treaty with the government in 2006, instead delving deeper into Colombia’s criminal underworld and setting up operations in the strategic Gulf of Uraba region in northern Colombia, a major drug corridor surrounded by the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean on either side.
Leaks and a network of safe houses at rural homesteads allowed him for years to resist a scorched-earth campaign by the military against the Gulf Clan.
But the war was taking its toll on the 50-year-old fugitive, who even while on the run insisted on sleeping on orthopedic mattresses to ease a back injury.
In 2017, he showed his face for the first time on occasion of Pope Francis’ visit to the country, publishing a video in which he asked for his group be allowed to lay down its weapons and demobilize as part of the country’s peace process with the much-larger Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.