Border Force seize a tonne of cocaine worth £100million hidden inside a shipment of BANANA pulp 

Drug smugglers slip up! Border Force seize a tonne of cocaine worth £100million hidden inside a shipment of BANANA pulp

  • The drugs were uncovered in a routine inspection at the London Gateway depot
  • It is the second large drug shipment found at the Essex port in two months
  • The drugs were believed to have been sent from Colombia, intended for Belgium 
  • Home Secretary Priti Patel said such drugs ‘fuel criminality and destroy lives’

Border Force officers have seized more than a tonne of cocaine with an estimated value of £100million hidden in a shipment of banana pulp. 

The concealed drugs were discovered as part of routine inspections at the London Gateway depot in Essex last month, hidden in a shipping container docked at the port, the Home Office has said.

In total, 1,060 kilograms of cocaine were found. The drugs were thought to have been put in the cargo in Columbia and were intended to arrive in Antwerp, Belgium.

Home Secretary Priti Patel said: ‘Drugs fuel criminality and destroy lives.

‘Class A drugs such as cocaine inflict unimaginable damage on to our citizens and communities, shattering lives and stoking obscene levels of violence, disorder and crime.

‘This significant seizure of drugs sends a stark message to criminals in the UK and abroad seeking to smuggle drugs into or through the UK: you will not succeed and we will use every inch of our law enforcement powers to track down and stop drugs from coming into the UK.’

Border Force officers have seized more than a tonne of cocaine with an estimated value of £100million hidden in a shipment of banana pulp

The concealed drugs were discovered as part of routine inspections at the London Gateway depot in Essex last month, hidden in a shipping container docked at the port, according to the Home Office

The concealed drugs were discovered as part of routine inspections at the London Gateway depot in Essex last month, hidden in a shipping container docked at the port, according to the Home Office

The discovery on November 12 marks the second-largest shipment of cocaine to be discovered at the Essex port in the space of two months.

In September, Border Force National Deep Rummage Team officers discovered 1,155 kilograms of cocaine in a shipment of paper also bound for Antwerp.

The National Crime Agency (NCA) is investigating the discoveries to identify those involved, though the two shipments are not believed to be linked.

In total, 1,060 kilograms of cocaine were found. The drugs were thought to have been put in the cargo in Columbia and were intended to arrive in Antwerp, Belgium

NCA branch commander Jacque Beer said: ‘These were substantial seizures and will represent a significant hit to the organised crime groups involved, meaning less profit for them to reinvest.

‘While the UK wasn’t the end destination for either shipment, it is likely that at least a proportion would have ended up being sold on our streets.

‘The NCA is working with law enforcement partners in the UK, in Europe and worldwide to target the criminal networks behind drug trafficking and disrupt their activities.’