Arkansas Online

Colombia nabs most wanted drug lord

RACHEL PANNETT, DIANA DURAN AND SAMANTHA SCHMIDT

Colombia’s most wanted drug lord, Dairo Antonio Usuga, widely known by his alias Otoniel, has been captured by armed forces in his jungle hideout.

Usuga, 50, a former leftwing guerrilla and later a paramilitary fighter, is the alleged leader of the notorious drug trafficking group Clan del Golfo, or Gulf Clan, which dominates major cocaine smuggling routes through thick jungles in the country’s restive north.

President Ivan Duque likened his arrest Saturday to the capture of Pablo Escobar three decades ago. The billionaire drug baron, known as “the Godfather,” once sat on top of the drug world with tentacles reaching around the globe.

“Otoniel was the most feared drug trafficker in the world, killer of police, of soldiers, of social leaders, and recruiter of children,” Duque said during a broadcast video message. “This blow is only comparable to the fall of Pablo Escobar in the 1990s.”

Usuga is accused of sending dozens of shipments of cocaine to the United States.

He is also accused of killing police officers, recruiting minors and sexually abusing children, among other crimes, Duque said. The U.S. government had put up a reward of $5 million for help locating him.

Analysts are warning of possible violent repercussions and internal power struggles as others jostle to take Usuga’s place.

Still, his arrest is unlikely to change the fundamentals of drug trafficking in Colombia, which experts say is much more fragmented now than in the days when Escobar dominated the trade. Escobar revolutionized cocaine trafficking in the 1970s and 1980s, pioneering large-scale shipments first to the United States, then to Europe.

“This is not going to move the needle in terms of the war on drugs. … What happens next is different pieces of the puzzle aligning to fill the vacuum of power left by Otoniel,” said Sergio Guzmán, director of the consulting firm Colombia Risk Analysis. “Soon, we’ll have another kingpin and another drug lord who may be much worse.”

In its reward notice, the U.S. Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs stated Usuga’s criminal network used violence and intimidation to control narcotics trafficking routes, cocaine processing laboratories, speedboat departure points and clandestine landing strips. He set up operations in the strategic Gulf of Uraba region in northern Colombia, a major drug corridor surrounded by the Pacific Ocean on one side and the Caribbean sea on the other.

Usuga evaded capture for years by moving between safe locations in the remote jungle region. Gen. Jorge Luis Vargas, director of Colombia’s national police, said Saturday that Usuga slept in rough conditions, hardly ever spending time in homes, and dined on his favorite jungle animals.

Years of intelligence work, with assistance from the United States and United Kingdom, eventually led Colombian special forces soldiers to his jungle hideout, Vargas said. He moved around with eight rings of bodyguards.

Usuga’s arrest is a win for the conservative Duque, whose law-and-order rhetoric has been no match for soaring production of cocaine.

Duque said Saturday that there are extradition orders against Usuga, and authorities will work to carry out those orders while “learning all of the truth about the rest of his crimes in our country.”

Usuga was indicted in Manhattan federal court in 2009 on narcotics import charges and for allegedly providing assistance to a far-right paramilitary group designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. government.

Later indictments in Brooklyn and Florida accused him of international cocaine distribution dating back as far as 2002, conspiracy to murder rival drug traffickers and drug-related firearms offenses.

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2021-10-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-10-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://edition.arkansasonline.com/article/281857236743910

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