Colombia destroys 104 jungle cocaine laboratories

The laboratories were capable of producing some 100 tonnes of the drug annually

Anti-narcotics police officers walk in front of a burning cocaine lab in Calamar, Guaviare state, Colombia, Tuesday, August 2nd, 2016. Photograph: Fernando Vergara/AP Photo

Colombian law enforcement has destroyed 104 cocaine laboratories capable of producing some 100 tonnes of the drug annually, the head of the anti-narcotics police said on Tuesday.

The operation, conducted over five days in the country’s southeastern jungle region, is part of a new government strategy focused on combating drug production as well as the cultivation of coca, the base ingredient of cocaine.

"This is a structural blow to the finances of drug trafficking," anti-narcotics police director Gen Jose Angel Mendoza told Reuters in the jungles of Guaviare province.

He said the drugs would have made it from Colombia to Brasil, then to Venezuela and finally into Europe

READ MORE

The laboratories were burned down by police commandos.

Coca cultivation was up 39 per cent in Colombia in 2015, according to United Nations data.

Law enforcement in the country confiscated 253 tonnes of cocaine in 2015, up 71 per cent on the year before.

Leftist rebels and crime gangs are both involved in the drug trade - taxing coca growers, running production laboratories and smuggling the drug in partnership with Mexican cartels.

Reuters