A
former navy chief of the small West African nation of Guinea-Bissau who
is suspected of being a kingpin in the international cocaine trade has
been brought to the U.S. and is being held by authorities in New York
City following his arrest at sea by federal drug agents, a law
enforcement official said Friday.
Four other men
apprehended in the operation also were being held by authorities in New
York City, according to the official, who was not authorized to speak
publicly about the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Public television
in the Cape Verde Islands reported that Rear Adm. Jose Americo Bubo Na
Tchuto and four other Guinea-Bissau nationals were taken into custody
aboard a yacht in international waters in the eastern Atlantic Ocean. It
said authorities took the five into nearby Cape Verde, a former
Portuguese colony, and that Na Tchuto was flown from there to the United
States.
Justice Department
spokeswoman Nanda Chitre declined to comment.
The U.S. Treasury
Department designated Na Tchuto as a drug kingpin in 2010 for his
alleged role in the cocaine trade in Guinea-Bissau, freezing any assets
he may have had in the United States. For at least a decade,
Guinea-Bissau has played a key role in the drug trade. The country’s
archipelago of virgin islands has been used by Latin American cartels as
a stopover point for ferrying cocaine to Europe, where prices have
skyrocketed at the same time that demand for cocaine leveled off in
North America.
A former navy chief
of staff, Na Tchuto is believed to have played a role in the arrival of
a plane carrying hundreds of pounds of cocaine from Venezuela to
Guinea-Bissau in July 2008, according to a statement from the Treasury
Department. He later fled to nearby Gambia in August 2008, returning to
Guinea-Bissau over a year later. He apparently feared for his life and
sought refuge inside the United Nations Peacebuilding Support Office in
Bissau, the country’s capital.
The U.S. believes
the former navy chief also was involved in organizing an April 2010
attempt to overthrow the Guinea-Bissau government.
Fernando Vaz, the
spokesman for the government of Guinea-Bissau, said that he had not yet
received confirmation from U.S. officials regarding the arrest of Na
Tchuto. He said he hoped America would provide Na Tchuto a fair legal
defense.
Guinea-Bissau has
been plagued by coups. The last few, including one last year, are
believed to have been fueled by an internal power struggle over which
wing of the military would control the drug trade.
A booming cocaine
trade has turned Guinea-Bissau into a narco-state. Key members of the
military have been named as complicit in the trade, including several
army and navy chiefs who are now on the United States’ drug kingpin
list. The infusion of illicit cash has emboldened an already bloated
army. Drugs, observers say, played a role in the recent coup.
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