Pubdate: Mon, 28 Feb 2000 Source: Times, The (UK) Copyright: 2000 Times Newspapers Ltd Contact: PO Box 496, London E1 9XN, United Kingdom Fax: +44-(0)171-782 5046 Website: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Author: Giles Tremlett And Stewart Tendler DRUG CARTELS TURN HEATHROW INTO HEROIN HUB HEATHROW airport has become the hub of heroin smuggling operations by Colombian drug cartels targeting European cities. American and Spanish drugs intelligence officers say that the cartels, which made their fortunes out of cocaine supplies, are expanding into heroin markets after planting opium poppy fields in South America. They are using Heathrow as a key transit point for high-value heroin cargoes as the cartels try to take over European markets. The drugs are moved by couriers on flights from the Caribbean and Central America. The drugs are carried in hand luggage and passed over to British couriers in transit lounges. The new couriers then take flights to European capitals, including Madrid and Amsterdam. They are not checked thoroughly when they land because flights from London are not regarded as top priority. Investigators have concentrated on flights direct from South America. Yesterday a spokesman for Customs said that Heathrow was the busiest international airport in the world. So far no Colombian heroin couriers have been arrested at the airport, but investigators are aware that Colombian gangs are making inroads into traditional European heroin markets. Earlier this month Central Intelligence Agency estimates published in Washington showed that the Colombians increased cultivation of opium poppies by 23 per cent last year. Drugs investigators believe that the cartels have shouldered aside Chinese and Asian heroin suppliers to become the leading heroin suppliers in the United States. Spanish police have put a special watch on flights from Heathrow in an attempt to break what they are calling "the ghost route". Controls were set up on Heathrow flights six months ago after Spanish police received a tip-off from the Drug Enforcement Administration in Washington about the Colombians' plans to oust the Asian groups that have traditionally controlled the heroin trade in Britain and Europe. Spanish police, who admit that they have not managed to capture a single heroin courier on the new route, said that they faced an uphill task. They said they were used to seizing cocaine from "mules" arriving on flights from Latin America, but conceded that they did not usually pay much attention to British flights. "Until now the Colombians have used their own people, or Spaniards, as couriers," a police source at Madrid's Barajas airport said. "It is a lot more difficult to detect and stop British couriers." The Colombians have been fighting a fierce turf war with gangs from the Far East's Golden Triangle and with Middle Eastern traffickers for control of the heroin trade in the United States in recent years. That battle has now been won by the Colombians and their trafficking allies from the Dominican Republic, who now account for two thirds of the heroin discovered in America. Their strategy for controlling that market has included selling heroin with purity levels reaching as high as 95 per cent, and undercutting the prices of their competitors. Spain and The Netherlands are two of the countries that are believed to be receiving a new influx of high-grade Colombian heroin from the British couriers, according to customs officials in Britain and Spain. "We have heard that there is a route coming in via transit to The Netherlands," a British Customs and Excise spokesman confirmed. Paris: President Chirac will travel to The Netherlands today for a visit that he hopes will repair tensions over liberal Dutch drug laws. The Netherlands is the source of 30 to 60 per cent of illegal drugs seized in France. (Reuters) The purity of the Colombian heroin makes it particularly dangerous to addicts who are liable to overdose. "They even market their drug using brand names - like No Way Out and Death Wish - as a way to instil customer recognition and loyalty," William Ledwith, the US Drug Enforcement Administration's chief of international operations, told a congressional committee earlier this month. With the conquest of the US already complete, the Colombians, who already control the cocaine trade, now want Europe's heroin market. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck