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tv   Cocaine  BBC News  April 22, 2023 12:30pm-1:00pm BST

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sums it until the end. i think this sums it up. his family released a statement, saying that he is in hospital receiving treatment for health issues. this is the line that he came up with, just this week. he he said that he thanked everybody for the support and good wishes he has received but would like more and more! that pretty much sums it up. for someone who has made so many people laugh for so many years. thank you very much for that update. we will be back on speaking to you again later on. for now though. just bring you that news that we have been hearing in the last hour or so that the australian entertainer barry humphries, best known for dame edna everage has been treated in hospital and now we have the confirmation that he has died at the age of 89. this is bbc news.
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hello. after the abundance of blue skies many saw through the week, the weekend is already looking different. a lot more cloud out there. there will be some rain at times, not for everyone. one or two spots will stay dry. but the general trend, especially later this weekend, is for colder air to arrive. now, at the moment, we've got two main rain—bearing clumps of cloud, one to the south, mainly to the southwest. and this one here, which across southern scotland, northern ireland, far north of england, continues to produce rain through the afternoon. turning a bit lighter and patchier, never quite reaching some of the central belt. and here northwards, plenty of sunshine for most, a bit of cloud lingering around the murray firth and sutherland. warmest again, 16 degrees out towards the west of scotland. but the winds will be picking up, some rain in wales, the south west later, but central eastern parts of england, a brighter
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and milder day than yesterday. now, this evening and overnight, rain from wales and the south west will spread its way erratically across other parts of england and wales before fading the rain in southern scotland. northern ireland starts to peter out but some heavier showers into the northeast of scotland later. get any clear skies, could be a few mist and fog patches and it will be a chilly start to tomorrow. but by and large, for tomorrow, again, lots of cloud, frost—free. and for those heading to the marathon, expect rain. i'm slightly optimistic. whilst you're waiting, you might avoid the worst of that rain, but the rain will be setting in for the start of the race, and that rain will spread across parts of the east midlands, lincolnshire, east anglia and parts of yorkshire. some heavier showers to the west of that, but some western coasts will have a brighter day than today. certainly a brighter day in northern ireland, southern scotland, but northern scotland, a lot more cloud. and notice the temperatures — seven or eight degrees. it will be colder and a strong wind to go with it. widespread gales in the north of scotland through sunday and into monday. those northerly winds bringing the cold air southwards to all parts. so we'll all notice a chillier feel on monday.
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outbreaks of rain that, overnight, will be in northern ireland, spread towards wales, south west and southern england during the day. a scattering of sunshine and showers further north and through northern england, scotland, the showers where they fall on the hills could be a little bit on the wintry side. and there's the temperatures for monday — down on what you'd expect for this stage in late april, widely only around seven to ten or 11 degrees. as we go through monday night as well, we're going to see a widespread frost developing. not great news for the gardeners as we go into tuesday morning. that's how it's looking. i'll see you again soon. bye— bye. you're watching bbc news. now it's time for cocaine: flooding europe. the coke is everywhere. europe is battling a cocaine crisis, and one port in belgium is on the front line. everybody knows in europe that this is the port to do something. antwerp is now the main gateway to the continent. customs are intercepting
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record amounts. they found this, also cocaine. but international gangs are going to new depths to get their drugs through, even steering submarines packed with cocaine across the atlantic to spain. we discover how cocaine users are finding it easier than ever to feed their habit. it's actually faster than food delivery. authorities across the continent face an almighty struggle. we'll never win this battle. go, go, go, go, go, go, go. we're at the port of antwerp in belgium. this place is said to be the number one choice for cocaine smugglers trying to get their drugs into europe.
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antwerp port has grown massively over the decades. there are now 160 kilometres of quayside where ships can be unloaded. millions of containers arrive each year from around the world, and it's a smuggler�*s dream. paul meyer was sentenced to 12 years in prison in 2007 for trafficking drugs. antwerp was his number one route into europe. when i think back now on that time and i say, "no, it was completely wrong what i did." 100%. now my punishment is done, and i show you that the port is very open. he can understand why this port has become the gateway to europe for cocaine. i tried also in hamburg, and we tried also in marseille. everything is much easier in antwerp, and everybody who is doing this kind of business, they know antwerp is easy and that's
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the place to do something. and i know people, they try also other places, but they always come back to antwerp. he takes us for a ride around the sprawling port to show us how open it is. we drive around the container terminalfor two hours without being stopped or questioned. the port is open, like what we did now. you go inside, and all the information that you need to start something, you can see yourself. you have the truck drivers, you have the people who are working there. you have the name of the boat. and paying dockers for information to help his drugs get through was a vital part of the operation. there's so much money involved and so much profit. so there's enough money to pay people and, be honest, we are human. don't say and don't think that nobody is taking money. cocaine that's getting through the port of antwerp is now flooding the streets of the rest of europe. and we're off to meet one user
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who says it's easier than ever to get hold of the drug delivery people. this man, who we're calling matt, has been using cocaine for the past eight years. he says it's made his addiction worse. matt has already decided he will buy cocaine today and says he wants to show us just how easy and fast it is.
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it's just like getting food delivered, is it? at the promised time, matt's delivery arrives. so, you got it? and these deliveries are designed not to attract the attention of the police. and when you're buying cocaine, you're giving your money to gangs involved in other crime, maybe prostitution, luring young women in. do you think about that?
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but cocaine is so lucrative for so many gangs, there is violence within that. and a lot of innocent people can be caught up with it. and this is something you're fuelling through buying this, you and lots of other people. back at antwerp port, customs officers are seizing more cocaine than ever.
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this was a route from ecuador. they saw that the pile against doors was ok, but then the pile at the back of the truck was not homogeneous. so, darker edges and just and lighter in the middle. and then they found this, also cocaine. most of the drugs were destined for the netherlands to then be distributed to the uk as well as other parts of europe. tsunami. avalanche. how you will. it's coming to us and we are trying to stop the most. belgium customs intercepted so much cocaine in 2022, they can't destroy it fast enough. but some estimate only 10% of the cocaine arriving in antwerp is being detected.
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every way to smuggle cocaine as possible just invented, think of it, and they will do it. every year, it's growing and growing and we are doing more and more controls and still we seize more cocaine. does it feel like you're fighting an impossible battle? we will never win this battle. we do the best we can, and we will do every year better and better. around 2% of containers are physically checked. much of the goods are food, which will rot if not shifted quickly. more scanners are coming, but not fast enough. antwerp is now the number one port in europe for cocaine seizures, with the dutch city of rotterdam second. another entry point is galicia in spain, where traffickers are increasingly using another strategy.
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this is the first submarine known to have been used to bring cocaine from south america to europe. it's homemade and it travelled 4,000 miles across the atlantic ocean. the voyage in 2019 took 27 days and only ended when the three men on board tried to sink the vessel, but they'd been tracked and were arrested. but they'd been tracked the submarine, which is 20 metres long and made of carbon fibre, set off from brazil and first travelled along the amazon river. the captain they initially recruited took one look at it and said there's no way he'd be involved. he said it was like a suicide mission. head down inside and it's easy to see why. and this is where they lived for nearly a month. it's so cramped and claustrophobic in here. forfood, they had energy bars, cans of sardines. the toilet was a bag
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in the corner, and that was it. they had nothing else, apart from three tonnes of cocaine in the front worth more than £100 million. this so—called narco sub is now on display at the spanish police academy, an hour outside the capital, madrid, far from the sea. it's a symbol of a successful operation. but this submarine attempt wasn't a one—off. law enforcement agencies from europe and the americas, including here in colombia, say semi—submersible vessels have been used for more than 20 years and that, after being built in the quiet of the jungle, hundreds have been launched across the ocean. in fact, police suspect that in the middle of the atlantic, around the canary islands and the azores, there is a mass graveyard of cocaine.
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graveyard of cocaine submarines, deliberately sunk after successful voyages. any cargo or secrets they still hold on the bottom of the ocean. and gangs are now said to be developing automated subs to get their cocaine to europe. no skipper or crew needed. in march, off the coast of galicia in spain again, another submarine was found, although this one was empty. for the national police force, it's making theirjobs even tougher. but on the day we visit, the police are celebrating a big success. not far from where both the narco subs were found, they've just discovered a cocaine factory. they say it was the biggest of its kind everfound in europe. the spanish police have
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recreated the drugs factory and the assembly line, starting with this — raw coca paste. it's got a really strong vinegar smell. it would then be cooked up using lots of chemicals. it would then be pressed over here. they'd weigh the products that they have. and take a look at this. this is 150 kilos worth of cocaine, a purity of 95%. what you see here on this table has a street value of around nine million euros. that's about £8 million. if there was one thing you as a senior police officer could have, which would change everything, which would make it so much easier for you, what would that be? just one thing.
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for now, it is regular boats that carry the vast majority of the cocaine coming to europe, and it's arriving in ever bigger quantities. raids have been taking place across the country. stashes of drugs seized. millions of euros confiscated. a deluge of coke and cash. and the top—of—the—range cars, spoils of the lifestyle enjoyed by the super rich criminals. many have been arrested, but others not. and stemming the flow coming into europe can feel
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like an impossible task, like holding back the tide. the united nations says global production of cocaine jumped dramatically over the past two years. it's up a third after a slowdown due to the covid pandemic. the un says the increase is because there's more raw coca being made, and there have been improvements in converting the plants to the finished drug that then floods the streets. back in belgium, chief inspector charlier and team are preparing for saturday night on patrol in the capital, brussels. looking for cocaine dealers has become a bigger part of their work.
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the team still try to swoop in for an arrest. it seems the suspect, only 16, was dealing marijuana. another young male, suspected of selling cocaine, has got away. and children are playing crucial roles for the drugs gangs. that boy, they think, is only 13 years old, they've just been talking to him because they think he's a spotter. he works for some of the gangs here, they reckon, and he gives information to them and also keeps a lookout if the officers are here. as night falls, cocaine continues
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to be distributed across the city. this neighbourhood, peterbos, one of so many where the drug is an increasingly important commodity being bought and sold out in the open. this is the dealing point for cocaine. yes. for cocaine? this specific area? cocaine corner? and it's in the entrances and stairwells of the tower blocks
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where business is done. the menu of drugs for sale scribbled on this wall, as well as the licence plates of suspected undercover police cars that have been seen in the area. that's the plate of our car. in the port of antwerp, they've been seizing lots more cocaine. have you seen an impact here on the streets?
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well, for this police team, their shift is coming to an end now. tomorrow, though, they'll do it all again, because the amount of cocaine coming into this country is alarming for lots of people. the amount of cocaine coming into europe, this is a problem that's getting worse. because, while europe's cocaine crisis may well be hidden from view in many places, with most users undetected, it is fuelling violence, which is exploding onto the streets with devastating effect.
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this morning at 5:00, some people arrived here and they shot at the door, because they think here lived a family or here lives a family related to a drugs gang. we've met up with the antwerp—based crime reporter, patrick lefelon. they shoot on your door with guns, with kalashnikovs, or they throw grenades or heavy fireworks. and then you get this. as a result, they try to get their cocaine out of the port in antwerp. so, to sell it in the rest of europe.
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and they have corrupt contacts in the harbour. they pay them a lot. but when they don't get the result, when the cocaine cargo is missing, for example, they say, "yeah, you have to pay us back," or they take some revenge. so, since summer, i think every week we have two, three assaults in the drug scene. that's an incredible amount. and quite often they're getting the wrong address, like here. quite often, they...the guys who do the assaults are recruited in, mainly, in holland. so, theyjust get an address, they put it in their ways or i don't know what. but for example, we have the same streets in different districts in antwerp. patrick says there is a growing fear in this community about the fallout from this surge in violence. everyone is afraid that one day or another an innocent
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people could get hurt, maybe killed by a mistake. and just a few weeks later, an 11—year—old girl is shot dead in antwerp. an innocent life lost in this growing spiral of violence. for those trying to bring the drugs gangs to justice, it is a huge challenge to secure evidence and witnesses in this world where so much money is being made so quickly. michele claeys, belgium's top investigative magistrate,
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says the cocaine market is now out of control. the united nations is warning that international drug gangs are working together like never before. and now eyeing up markets in africa and asia, as europe's cocaine crisis deepens and expands.
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hello. after the abundance of blue skies many saw through the week, the weekend is already looking different. a lot more cloud out there. there will be some rain at times. not for everyone, one or two spots will stay dry. but the general trend, especially later this weekend, is for colder air to arrive. now, at the moment, we've got two main rain—bearing clumps of cloud, one to the south, mainly to the southwest. and this one here, which across southern scotland, northern ireland, far north of england, continues to produce rain through the afternoon. turning a bit lighter and patchier, never quite reaching some of the central belt. and here northwards, plenty of sunshine for most, a bit of cloud lingering around the murray firth and sutherland. warmest again, 16 degrees out towards the west of scotland. but the winds will be picking up, some rain in wales, the south west later,
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but central, eastern parts of england, a brighter and milder day than yesterday. now, this evening and overnight, rain from wales and the south west will spread its way erratically across other parts of england the rain in southern scotland, northern ireland starts to peter out, but some heavier showers into the northeast of scotland later. get any clear skies, could be a few mist and fog patches and it will be a chilly start to tomorrow. but by and large, for tomorrow, again, lots of cloud, frost—free. and for those heading to the marathon, expect rain. i'm slightly optimistic — whilst you're waiting, you might avoid the worst of that rain, but the rain will be setting in for the start of the race, and that rain will spread across parts of the east midlands, lincolnshire, east anglia and parts of yorkshire. some heavier showers to the west of that, but some western coasts will have a brighter day than today. certainly a brighter day in northern ireland, southern scotland, but northern scotland — a lot more cloud. and notice the temperatures — seven or eight degrees. it will be colder and a strong wind to go with it. widespread gales in the north of scotland through sunday and into monday. those northerly winds bringing the cold air southwards to all parts.
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so we'll all notice a chillier feel on monday. outbreaks of rain that, overnight, will be in northern ireland, spread towards wales, south west and southern england during the day. a scattering of sunshine and showers further north and through northern england, scotland, the showers where they fall on the hills could be a little bit on the wintry side. and there's the temperatures for monday — down on what you expect for this stage in late april, widely only around seven to ten or 11 degrees. as we go through monday night as well, we're going to see a widespread frost developing. not great news for the gardeners as we go into tuesday morning. that's how it's looking. i'll see you again soon. bye— bye.
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live from london. this is bbc news. barry humphries, the comedian best known for his character dame edna, has died aged 89. the australiam prime minister has taken to twitter to pay tribute to humphries, calling him �*one—of—a—kind' and �*gifted'. fighting in sudan continues into the weekend despite the announcement of a three—day truce by the army and the paramilitary rsf group. hello and welcome to the programme, i'm lewis vaughanjones.

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