Vi har hørt om små droner som smugler drugs inn i fengsler, men dette er av en annen skala. (Red.)
Spanish Police Seize Large Drone Used to Carry
Drugs from Morocco
White, with a wingspan of 4.5 meters and a capacity to carry 150 kilos
of cargo. Those were the characteristics of an enormous drone that was put on
show earlier this week by the National Police in the southern Spanish province
of Málaga, in the Andalusia region. The latest surprising seizure made by the
authorities involves an organization of French drug traffickers who
were looking to establish themselves on the Costa del Sol.
The criminal gang used the aircraft to transport drugs from Morocco to
the small town of Almáchar (1,811 inhabitants). The drone has the capability to
fly for up to seven hours at a maximum speed of 170km/h. As such, its range
for transporting narcotics “is
huge,” according to Antonio Rodríguez Puertas, the chief inspector in charge of
the UDYCO organized crime unit in Málaga.
“We’ve never seen a drone this big used for this purpose,” said Pedro
Luis Bardón, from the National Police’s airborne resources unit. “There were
some precedents, but not like this. This is the biggest one ever found in
Spain.”
Built in China and with a cost of anywhere between €30,000 and
€150,000, depending on its technical characteristics, the drone has five
motors. Four of them are electric and allow the aircraft to land and take off
vertically. The fifth, a two-cylinder combustion engine, allows for horizontal
flight.
The drone can reach altitudes of 2,000 meters (around 7,000 feet), but
in general would fly much lower in order to save fuel and avoid detection.
However, the aircraft does appear on radar and its electromagnetic
communications can also be tracked. These are two of the factors that the
police used to confirm the existence of the device. The inside of the aircraft
is hollow, and would normally be used for cameras or other electrical
equipment. In the case of the drug gang, it was being used for packages of
narcotics, particularly cocaine, which brings in the biggest profits.
“Technology makes our lives easier,
but it also ends up in the hands of the bad guys,” said the Málaga police
chief, Roberto Rodríguez Velasco. “They innovate and we have to do so too.”
Also in the province of Málaga, last year Udyco located a
nine-meter-long semi-submersible vessel that was going to be used to smuggle
tons of drugs at a time and was estimated to have cost €1 million.
The drug gang was flying the drone using an electronic system that
relayed the exact takeoff and landing points, and used waypoints – i.e. places
during the flight where it had to change course. It could also be flown using
remote control. The police reported, however, that the criminals did not have
much training or knowledge for its use. This fact, combined with the large size
of the aircraft, meant it posed a considerable danger to other air traffic –
even for passenger planes.
The drone can be dismantled to facilitate its transport, and was
located by the authorities in a house being used as a storage location for
narcotics outside Almáchar in the Axarquía area. The zone has a lot of isolated
homes, something that is taken advantage of by drug gangs to operate unnoticed.
Operation Piñas, which led to the seizure of the drone, began last
month when Udyco detected the French gang, who were also being tracked by
police in their home country. Four people were arrested in the operation –
three in France and a fourth in Almáchar. In total, 30 kilograms of marijuana
and 55 of hashish were found during the operations in Spain and France.
“The fight against drug trafficking is
one of our priorities,” said the sub-delegate for the central government in
Málaga, Teófilo Ruiz, who added that in 2020, the National Police seized 27.5
tons of narcotics in the province, breaking up 55 criminal groups and detaining
695 people suspected of involvement in trafficking.
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