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Spanish police bust underground hashish route from Morocco

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Spanish police have discovered a drug-smuggling tunnel in the North African exclave of Ceuta, ​complete with a rail system and underground cranes ‌to transport hashish from Morocco into Spain.
Police said in a statement on Tuesday that the structure, concealed beneath an ​industrial warehouse, extended over three levels, including ​a descent shaft, an intermediate chamber for pallet ⁠storage, and the tunnel itself.
Spain is a major ​entry point for hashish into Europe. Ceuta, along with ​the other Spanish exclave of Melilla to the east, forms the European Union’s (EU) only land border with Africa.
Authorities seized 17 ​metric tons of the drug, 1.4 million Euros ($1.6 ​million) in cash, and arrested 27 people in connection with ‌the ⁠operation. The police did not disclose the street value of the haul.
Hashish, derived from cannabis resin, is usually trafficked into Spain by sea using speedboats.
In 2023, ​Spain accounted ​for 68% ⁠of all resin seizures in the EU, according to the latest data from ​the EU drugs agency.
Smugglers have sometimes used ​unconventional ⁠methods to bring other drugs into Spain.
In the northwestern region of Galicia, submarines or semi-submersible vessels are periodically ⁠discovered ​transporting cocaine from South America, ​underscoring the country’s role as a transit hub.
–Reuters–