Source: The Examiner (Ireland) Contact: Sat, 23 May 1998 Author: Brian Carroll - Security Correspondent #120M DRUGS HAUL SEIZED OFF COAST IN LAST FIVE YEARS ALMOST #120m worth of cannabis and cocaine has been seized off the coast in the past five years by the Customs National Drugs Team, but more than half of the drugs passing through our waters to Europe still go undetected. Members of the Customs National Drugs Team have warned that the level of trafficking through Irish waters is set to double over the next 20 years, as international dealers in cocaine and ecstasy continue to exploit our coastal waters as a gateway to Europe. Since 1993, customs officers have seized over 6,900 kilos of cannabis off the coast, and 630 kilos of cocaine. In today's street prices, the cannabis seizures would be worth over #69m, with the cocaine hauls valued at over #50m. But the #120m worth of drugs seized in Irish waters since 1993 still only represents an estimated 35% of all the drugs passing through to Europe from North Africa and South America. "We have become much more sophisticated over the last ten years. It is fair to say that ten years ago there was a certain amount of naiveti, but even now with all the international co-operation that's in place, we are not getting anything near all the drugs coming through. The United Nations estimates that 35% of all drugs produced are seized, and it's fair to say that that applies to Ireland, as well," a customs officer said. The officer, who cannot be named for security reasons, estimates that the problem will increase: "The trend in terms of seizures is increasing, but that doesn't mean we are getting any more of the drugs because the production is also increasing, as is consumption." The international drugs trade is estimated to have an annual worth of #175 billion in sterling, second only to the arms industry as the biggest global business in the world. Customs surveyor Brendan Mulcahy told delegates at an international conference of shipmasters in Cork, yesterday, that drug trafficking was on the increase. "It is now a worldwide problem, and the rate of production of cocaine is on the increase. There are now 170 different recipes for ecstasy on the Internet, if you are interested. In my view, the situation is worsening. If you look at the progress drug dealers have made in the past 20 years, I think the problem in the next 20 years is going to at least double," Mr Mulcahy said. Ireland is particularly susceptible to drug trafficking because of its key position along the cocaine route from South America to Europe, and on the cannabis route from North Africa and the Caribbean to Europe. The conference also heard there was a growing trade in illegal consignments of tobacco and alcohol into Ireland, with stolen computer components moving out of Ireland to other markets. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)