Australia warship makes huge Arabian Sea hashish seizure

This handout photo, taken on December 28, 2017 and released by the Australian Department of Defense on December 30, 2017, shows leading Seaman Naval Police Coxswain Jamie Janes, center, numbering narcotic parcels seized by the HMAS Warramunga during operations at sea in the Middle East. (Australian Department of Defense via AFP)

SYDNEY: An Australian warship has seized almost eight tons of hashish in the Arabian Sea, with the defense department Saturday estimating its street value at Aus$415 million ($325 million).
HMAS Warramunga has also confiscated 69 kilograms of heroin during maritime security maneuvers in the area over the past three days.
“The crew prepared extensively for a task like this and we were able to employ our helicopter and boarding crews to locate and board three suspect vessels,” the ship’s commanding officer Dugald Clelland said.
“A thorough search by the boarding parties uncovered a large quantity of hashish and heroin intended for distribution around the world.”
The drugs will be disposed of at sea.
Major General John Frewen, head of Australian Forces in the Middle East, described the seizure as a big setback for drug traffickers.
“This operation will impact on the flow of narcotics around the world and the use of drug money to fund extremist organizations,” he said.
The officials did not say which country’s shoreline the seized drugs were closest to.
The HMAS Warramunga is part of the Combined Maritime Forces (CMF) naval partnership in which 30 nations patrol 2.5 million square miles of international waters.
The warship enforces maritime security with a focus on terrorist activity in the Middle East and Indian Ocean regions as part of the Combined Task Force (CTF) 150, which operates under the CMF.