A Ong suiça financia a construção de uma Escola Comunitária na localidade de Tumana-Bambadinca no âmbito da parceria com a Associação da Solidariedade Guiné-Bissau/Suíça.
Aliu Cande
It’s the same network, with the same drugs, the same packaging and the same modus operandiThey discovered white powder in about 15 of them.
The sheer amount of cocaine seized leaves no doubt that it was destined for the European marketThe third man, already known to the police for his involvement in trafficking stolen cars, gave himself up a few days later after absconding to Gambia and Guinea-Bissau.
At every link in the chain people take their cut, in cash or in kindAccording to the latest annual report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), global cocaine production has never been so high: nearly 2,000 tonnes in 2017, a 25% increase over 2016; 70% of this cocaine is produced in Colombia. The rest comes from Peru and Bolivia.
Our staff have been slightly increased, but overall we only have our torches, our heads and luckTraffickers hide the powder in the goods loaded on board or use the “rip off” technique, which consists of fraudulently opening a container to deposit their packages. “The challenge of controlling the flow of goods by sea is immense,” says a marine transport specialist. “The ships are getting bigger and bigger and more and more numerous. Checks are random and only cover a tiny minority of containers. Everything else goes through.”