Source: Times, The (UK) Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Pubdate: Fri, 02 Oct 1998 Author: Daniel McGrory DUPED TRUCKERS 'CAUGHT IN DRUG SMUGGLING WEB' Transport leaders are demanding protection for lorry drivers as more than 400 fight smuggling charges in Europe's jails. Most insist that they were used as unwitting couriers by drug gangs who are exploiting open borders and the massive increase in lorry traffic. Douglas Curtis of the United Road Transport Union (URTU) said: "The numbers are frightening and we have no idea how many drivers are in jail outside Europe, but the incidents are growing by the month. Of course some drivers are guilty, but we estimate 60 per cent of the 420 we know about in European jails are likely to be innocent dupes. "Customs never arrest an airline pilot if drugs are on a plane, but they believe drivers must know what is in a 23-tonne load they often pick up in sealed containers." Drivers are also finding that illegal immigrants are being smuggled into their cargo containers as they wait to board ferries back to Britain. A spokesman for the Road Haulage Association said: "In many cases, drivers have alerted the authorities, handed over the immigrants and yet have been arrested as accomplices. These incidents are growing, though not as fast as incidents involving drugs." More than a million lorries a year pass in and out of Britain. Mr Curtis said: "British drivers have an enviable reputation of being willing to drive wherever there is business and, with open borders, that is taking truckers to the Soviet republics and then back through Europe and through the most popular drug smuggling routes." A 41-year-old self-employed driver from Hertfordshire, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is fighting charges that last month he tried to smuggle UKP2 million-worth of cannabis into Britain by channel ferry. His order had been to collect a load of printing ink in Spain. He was puzzled when another lorry sat behind him on the drive to Cherbourg. He said: "At Cherbourg, the Customs were checking for immigrants, using sniffer dogs to see if the roof on my trailer had been tampered with. At the British port, Customs ordered me to stop and went straight for ten boxes out of the full load I had on a 44-tonne truck." Inside the lorry were 400kg of cannabis. "I pointed out the truck following me that was accelerating away but no one would listen." The driver, now on UKP10,000 bail, faces bankrutpcy because he is not allowed to leave the country and is being sued by hauliers for not meeting deliveries. Mr Curtis said: "While customs act on a tip on one truck, the more valuable load slips through. Most drivers are one-man bands so find it hard to raise money for legal costs. In countries outside Europe, the attitude is that if drugs are found you are guilty until you prove yourself innocent." Steve Bryant, 42, a father of four from northeast London, was sentenced to 12 years in March 1994 after three tonnes of cannabis was found in his load of frozen squid following a search at Tangier. A factory owner had told him to enjoy a break while the squid was loaded, and subsequently admitted that the driver could have had no idea that drugs were hidden in the cargo. Mr Bryant's father, Peter, said: "The Foreign Office doesn't care about him. I send them UKP200 a month for his food and toiletries in the prison, but I don't know how to fight his case any more." Most of those in foreign prisons have only their families to protest to their captors. Shirley Hobbs has lobbied Tony Blair about her brother-in-law, Peter Hobbs, serving a 7 1/2 -year sentence for alleged drug-smuggling in Bulgaria. She said: "Peter is innocent, even the British police say so, but he has been left to rot." Hobbs and fellow-driver John Mills, both 41, from Enfield, North London, were returning with an empty lorry from Turkey when they were stopped by Bulgarian border guards, who walked straight to the unlocked toolbox outside the cab and found 20kg of heroin. Martin Crowe, 31, from Bradford, was driving back from Malaga with a consignment of ceramic tiles when a tyre burst and set fire to his trailer. He called the emergency services. As the flames peeled away the packaging around the tiles, there was the distinct odour of cannabis burning. More than UKP600,000-worth was hidden in the cargo. Despite his protests that he would hardly have alerted police if he knew cannabis was on board, Mr Crowe was jailed by a French court. He spent more than four months in prison before he was freed on appeal, but his vehicle was confiscated. Officials from the World Customs Organisation are to meet URTU leaders next month, but Mr Curtis said "We need to sort this at inter-government level in Europe so Customs can agree a way to deal with drivers. Europe has to harmonise its approach." David Higginbottom, general secretary of the URTU, added: "Drivers have to be aware that they are targets for drug barons who see them as easy prey, particularly those new to international routes and who aren't with big companies or a union. Often these sorts of drivers are left for weeks in custody before anyone knows they are there." - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski