Cocaine worth $2.5m washes up on Philippine seashore

Inside the drum, anti-drug agents found about 24 kilograms of cocaine bricks wrapped in plastic

PHOTO: FILE

MANILA:
Millions of dollars of cocaine packed in a plastic drum has washed up on a seashore in the eastern Philippines, an anti-narcotics official said Friday.

A local fisherman in the town of Matnog found the drum on Wednesday and reported it to authorities, not knowing what was inside, said Christian Frivaldo, a regional director of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency.

Inside the drum, anti-drug agents found about 24 kilograms (53 pounds) of cocaine bricks wrapped in plastic, he told AFP.

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Frivaldo estimated the value of the cocaine at about 125 million pesos ($2.5 million).


The source of the cocaine found in Matnog -- about 403 kilometres (250 miles) southeast of the capital Manila -- may be a Taiwan-flagged cargo vessel that was hit by huge waves off the eastern Philippines a day before the cocaine was found, he said.

Nine Chinese, Hong Kong and Taiwanese crewmen are under the custody of the local government after they were rescued from their damaged ship, he added.

"They are under investigation. We are checking their vessel (to see) if there is additional evidence inside. But it is difficult because it is half-submerged," Frivaldo said.

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The seizure comes as Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte wages a bloody war on drugs that has resulted in nearly 4,000 "drug personalities" killed by police while thousands of others have been murdered under mysterious circumstances.

This has led rights groups to warn the president may be orchestrating crimes against humanity.
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